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  • 02/22/2018 8:24 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    February 22, 2018 -- Short-term rentals in Santa Monica that were listed on sites such as Airbnb generated nearly $2.5 million in hotel bed taxes during the past fiscal year, according to a report issued by the City this month.

    During the first four months of the current fiscal year, which began on July 1, the City collected more than $1 million in transient occupancy taxes (TOT), which is 14 percent in Santa Monica.

    Read More: http://surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2018/February-2018/02_22_2018_Santa_Monicas_Short_Term_Rental_Market_Thriving.html

    AND

    http://smdp.com/report-airbnb-hosts-make-millions-in-santa-monica-from-illegal-listings/164554

  • 02/22/2018 8:19 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    See mid-year line item budgeted, expenditures and projected amounts at: 2018 RENT BOARD BUDGET.pdf

  • 02/22/2018 8:11 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Los Angeles City Councilmembers introduced a resolution today to commit to building at least 3,330 housing units for homeless people citywide by mid-2020. 

    The resolution calls on the city’s 15 councilmembers to create at least 222 supportive housing units in each of their districts using Measure HHH, a $1.2-billion bond measure dedicated to building supportive housing and other services for homeless people.

    Read More:  https://la.curbed.com/2018/2/21/17036870/los-angeles-homeless-housing-development-citywide-pledge

  • 02/21/2018 8:20 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The Rent Control Board will continue to tackle tax surcharges on tenants who have seen their rental rates surge when they consider whether to create a subcommittee on the issue Thursday. The RCB aims to help current tenants who’ve surcharges increase because of property tax assessments during Santa Monica’s current real estate market boom.

    Last month, the RCB eliminated the issue for new tenants and future sales when they put a sunset on the law that allowed the pass-throughs to happen. A new property owner will no longer be able to pass any of the massive property tax increase down to tenants when they purchase a multi-unit building in Santa Monica. Because the decision is not retroactive, tenants currently paying surcharges will continue to do so unless they move out or the building is sold to a new owner.

    There are current surcharges linked to Measures X, S, BB and AA. Landlords could also pass along a stormwater management user fee, the clean beaches and ocean parcel tax and a 2008 school district special tax. The median monthly surcharge is $20.73, however, some tenants have seen their bills skyrocket in recent years.
    The RCB will decide whether to create a subcommittee to address tax-related surcharges when they meet Thursday night.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/financial-focus-for-upcoming-rent-control-meeting/164550

  • 02/21/2018 8:11 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Despite strict laws and a dedicated enforcement team, Santa Monica’s battle against illegal short term rentals is essentially a game of whack-a-mole, according to a report by city staff. Online violators use an array of tactics to outwit investigators, including deleting listings during City Hall business hours and manipulating addresses to appear to be in Los Angeles.

    Despite hundreds of listings here, only 187 home-shares are actually registered with the city. The report says it is difficult to know the exact number of illegal listings because platforms like AirBnb refuse to provide data to the code enforcement on the number of listings within city limits. In May 2017, an independent data analyst estimated there were 950 AirBnbs in Santa Monica.
    Despite the threat of fines, the report found illegal home-shares are a lucrative underground business.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/report-airbnb-hosts-make-millions-in-santa-monica-from-illegal-listings/164554

  • 02/21/2018 8:09 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    February 21, 2018 -- A prominent Santa Monica watchdog group on Tuesday offered its endorsement of a proposal for November’s ballot that would impose term limits on the seven-member City Council.

    The Santa Monica Coalition for a Livable City (SMCLC) announced its support of the “Terms Limit Initiative,” whose authors -- a first-term council member and the head of another City Hall watchdog group -- will begin circulating petitions to place the measure on the ballot.

    Over time, “a too cozy, symbiotic relationship often sets in with incumbent councilmembers, staff and the special interests who devote the energy and money to keep them in power,” SMCLC said in a statement.

    “Talented and highly qualified Santa Monicans are at such a disadvantage that they are often discouraged from running,” the organization said.

    It noted that in the past quarter of a century, all but two council incumbents have been re-elected.

    Read More: http://surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2018/February-2018/02_21_2018_Santa_Monica_Watchdog_Group_Endorses_Proposal_for_City_Council_Term_Limits.html

    AND

    http://smdp.com/advocates-launch-term-limit-measure-this-wednesday/164544

  • 02/21/2018 8:03 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    For five years, pundits, planners, and policy-makers have scratched their heads at Los Angeles' steep public transit ridership decline: a 21% decrease on buses,15% in total. To explain it, they cite ride-sharing, cheap gas, even the law that lets undocumented immigrants get licenses to drive. But another answer should be obvious: We lose transit riders when we displace the low-income families who rely on it.

    Data from Policy Link/PERE shows that L.A.'s transit riders are mostly low-income black and Latinos: 88% of Metro bus riders are people of color, and more than 50% have annual family incomes under $15,000. When they lose housing near bus or rail lines, they lose access to transit.

    Read More: http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-rosenthal-transit-gentrification-metro-ridership-20180220-story.html


  • 02/20/2018 8:18 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    February 20, 2018 -- Santa Monica State Rep. Richard Bloom introduced a bill last week that would bar landlords who empty rent controlled buildings under the state Ellis Act to return the property "piecemeal" to the rental market.

    Bloom’s Assembly Bill 2364 also would require landlords to give all tenants one year's notice that they are being evicted, rather than 120 days. Current law requires a one-year notice only for seniors and people with disabilities.

    "Advocates from around the state are seeing instances of landlords evicting all tenants in a property and then returning those units in a piecemeal fashion to rental market, skirting the original purpose of the law," Bloom's office said in a statement.

    The 1986 Ellis Act was originally passed to protect small-time landlords struggling to make ends meet under rent control a way to get out of the rental market.

    Read More: http://surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2018/February-2018/02_20_2018_Santa_Monica_State_Lawmaker_Introduces_Bill_to_Protect_Tenants_from_Ellis_Evictions.html

  • 02/20/2018 8:17 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    February20, 2018 -- With high personnel costs and record unfunded employee pensions equaling more than two thirds of its operating budget, the City of Santa Monica might not be able to “absorb” the fiscal shock of future recessions, according to the findings of an outside auditor.

    The report by Moss Adams, which goes to the two City panels this month tasked with studying City Hall compensation, recommends the City develop “financial and operational strategies,” to cope with financially hard-times in the future.

    With a diverse tax base, Santa Monica survived the 2008 recession without the cuts in staffing and efficiency measures other cities imposed to stay afloat, Moss Adams said.

    But the future could be different for the City without a change in approach, the audit suggests.

    Read More: http://surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2018/February-2018/02_20_2018_Outside_Audit_Warns_Santa_Monica_City_Might_Not_Be_Able_to_Absorb_Coming_Recessions.html

  • 02/20/2018 8:16 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Like a shot fired at the starting line, this week signaled the beginning of Santa Monica’s 2018 campaign season. On Monday, the first City Council challenger, local restaurant owner Greg Morena, announced his candidacy and launched a website. On Wednesday, community activist Mary Marlow will host a kick-off event to hand out petitions for her ballot initiative to put term limits on the City Council.

    Marlow has been meeting with neighborhood groups since she quietly filed the application for the initiative in January. The measure would limit Councilmembers to three terms (12 years) over the course of their lifetime. Since the measure is not retroactive, current members would still be able to run for three more terms, including Councilmember Sue Himmelrich, who is running for reelection and backing the measure.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/advocates-launch-term-limit-measure-this-wednesday/164544

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