Barger Issues Statement on L.A. County Supervisors’ Majority Vote to Extend and Impose More Rent Caps in Unincorporated Areas

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Supervisor Kathryn Barger issued the following statement today after the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted 3-2 to extend the current 4% rental increase cap on rental units located in unincorporated areas for another six months (through December 31, 2024) and impose new rent caps as of January 1, 2025. Barger was one of the two dissenting votes.

“My ‘no’ vote today reflects my belief that rent caps are the wrong approach to stabilizing our County’s housing crisis. 

The rent cap formula selected by the majority of our Board for next year does not include mortgage costs. Inflation is real. Further burdening property owners who also have bills to pay–such as rising homeowners insurance–and are struggling to keep up with costs is unbalanced and the wrong approach. 

Instead, we should focus our solutions on the power of supply and demand. Accelerating the development of more new housing in our County is our way out of the housing crisis. That includes examining California Environmental Quality Act reform and eliminating red tape. Layering restrictions on property owners wrongly treats a symptom and not the root cause of housing instability.” 

The State of California is requiring the County of Los Angeles to plan to accommodate 90,000 new housing units by 2029.

A question and answer exchange between Supervisor Barger and Los Angeles County’s Department of Regional Planning Director Amy Bodek during the Board of Supervisors meeting today revealed that 19,521 new housing units have been approved in the County in the last five years in unincorporated areas. In 2023, more than 4,800 housing units were approved. Of those, approximately 80% would be considered affordable, leaving only 20% as rentals at actual market rates. During the Board meeting, Los Angeles County’s Public Works Director Mark Pestrella further clarified that only 25% of those units (5,021) have been issued residential building permits–a core requirement for occupancy.