Infinite Moratorium Bills 191 H.5018 S.2918

The rent cancellation bill has been redrafted into an infinite eviction moratorium, asking some owners to wait 20+ years to receive payment. Think we are using hyperbole? Check our math below. Despite incorporating some of our input concerning the legal obligation for full reimbursement, this bill remains an existential threat to residential real estate rentals:

H.5018 S.2918 An Act to guarantee housing stability during the COVID-19 emergency and recovery

H.5018 (formerly HD.5166 H.4878) and its sister bill S.2918 (formerly S.2831 SD.2992) would:

  • Prohibit owners from accessing the courts for a full year after the state of emergency ends;
  • Require most owners to continue operating housing without income or reimbursement for years;
  • Enact just cause eviction rent control, outlawing rent increases, hindering major renovations, and creating permanent tenancies; and
  • Enact eviction sealing, making it impossible to screen tenants adequately, and unexpectedly creating secret courts open to bribery and corruption.

The bill is totally unnecessary in view of the CDC moratorium, which protects 86% of renters nationwide and 100% of low- and moderate-income renters.

The only crumbs for housing providers would be (1) the looks-good-but-isn't tax credit, (2) mortgage forbearance that requires us to forgive twice as much rent as we receive in mortgage, and (3) the same election year empty promise of a future fund to raise donations for us.

We must stop this bill, which despite a total gut renovation since July somehow still has over a quarter of the legislature as cosponsors. Once you're on the list, your name doesn't come off! We could instead accomplish every legitimate objective with a combination of the CDC moratorium and our Fair and Equal Housing Guarantee via Surety Bonds.

We have prepared detailed talking points opposed to H.5018 S2918, which we need you to use at the earliest opportunity by calling Reps and Senators:

MassLandlords urges all owners and managers to contact their Reps and Senators to oppose the bill using the talking points below. If you have questions before taking action, reply or call 774-314-1896 and leave a voicemail, we will help you prepare.

Your Rep & Senator Both Want to Hear from You on H.5018 S.2918

Legislators depend on a connection with their constituents to get reelected. If they aren’t aware of what’s good and bad, they will make bad choices. You may be the only person who is calling them about an issue. Every voice matters.

1a. Find your Rep and Senator

https://malegislature.gov/search/findmylegislator

First find and call the rep and senator where you live. If you have time, also call where each property you own is located.

https://malegislature.gov/Bills/191/H5018

https://malegislature.gov/Bills/191/S2918

Click the bill link to see if your Rep and Senator sponsored the bill.

1b. Recommendation:

Prepare to have the conversation in a flexible order; make notes to hit all your points.

2. Call and Start by Asking Permission to Share Your Viewpoint:

You probably will be put through to the legislator’s aide. This is OK. The aide will tell the legislator what you said. Adjust these to reflect reality:

1. “I’m a MassLandlords member/participant
” or “I’m a landlord
” “...living/working in your district.”

2. “I’m ________ (insert your own adjective but do not swear: concerned; outraged; angry) about H.5018 S.2918 An Act to guarantee housing stability during the COVID-19 emergency and recovery. Can I tell you about it?” (listen for their response; if it’s a bad time, schedule a call back.)

3. Acknowledge their Current Position:

If they sponsored: “This is something you have cosponsored. I’m asking you to reconsider.”

If they did not sponsor: “Please I’m asking you to oppose this legislation.”

Always: “I have 6 reasons why this bill is ruinous.”

4. Share Six Official Talking Points.

1. Say “One:” This bill is unnecessary. The CDC moratorium protects renters already.

a. The CDC moratorium lasts through December 2020 or longer, if extended.

b. It protects 100% of low- and moderate-income renters, 86% of all renters nationwide.

c. The state courts are going to enforce the CDC moratorium. They’ve already made the form for it.

d. Say, “that’s one.”

2. Say “Two:” This bill would create a moratorium that’s too long.

a. It would last until one year after the state of emergency, which has no end date.

b. If the vaccine for COVID is mediocre, the state of emergency might last for years.

c. Federal judge Wolf said in Baptiste v Kennealy, September 25 that an eviction moratorium is unconstitutional if it runs too long. It might have to end before the COVID emergency does.

d. Say, “that’s two.” (Keep it moving.)

3. Say “Three:” The primary payment for housing providers is a slow tax credit.

a. Tax credits aren’t rent. I have bills to pay every month. Where will I get the money to do that?

b. The credit will take forever. Imagine I lose 100% of my rent for a year. That’s like a 100% tax.

c. The tax credit refunds my MA income tax. That’s like a 5% per year refund.

d. 100 divided by 5 is 20. It would take a landlord with one unit twenty years to get repaid.

e. Since businesses only pay tax on net income, my actual tax is 5% of a smaller number. It would take me forever to be repaid.

f. I won’t even qualify for the tax credit if my renter gets RAFT. It’s not that my credit will be reduced, I’ll be fully ineligible, even if RAFT didn’t cover full rent.

g. Say, “that’s three.” (Keep it moving.)

4. Say “Four:” There is mortgage forbearance, but the math doesn’t work here either.

a. My mortgage represents half of my expenses each month.

b. If I accept the mortgage forbearance, I have to forgive rent for that month.

c. That means each month of forbearance I take, I lose twice as much in rent.

5. Say “Five:” The bill is a partisan wish list of proposals that have nothing to do with COVID.

a. The bill would seal all court records related to eviction. Landlords wouldn’t be able to screen renters, the courts would become open to bribery and corruption, and journalists would have to be licensed.

b. The bill would enact rent control. We tried this in MA, it failed. It made renovation illegal, had a disparate impact on people of color, and reduced our housing supply. We need much more housing.

c. The bill would enact just cause eviction. This makes it impossible to evict renters so criminally bad a landlord can’t get anyone to testify against them.

6. Say “Six:” The Governor has announced funding and help.

a. On Monday we allocated another $171 million for housing.

b. When the CDC moratorium expires next year, we can allocate more if we still need it.

5. Share your Personal Story

Example: “So that’s my six points, let me just add: I’ve been in business 12 years. I run a good property. This bill will ruin me. I’ll sell out to condo converters or a slumlord, I don’t care who buys, I can’t operate free housing for years.”

6. Listen. Talk. Finally ask, “I’d Like to Ask You to Support our Alternative:”

“A Fair and Equal Housing Guarantee via Surety Bonds does everything anyone could want, no one will get evicted, but it won’t bankrupt me or the Commonwealth. The bill isn’t filed, but the text is online, anyone could be first to file it:”

Recommend they “Google ‘MassLandlords Fair and Equal Housing Guarantee,’ or get an email, share our link:

https://masslandlords.net/policy/fair-and-equal-housing-guarantee-via-surety-bonds/

“I’ve taken enough of your time, but in a nutshell, it’s just a guarantee of rental housing paid out of future tax revenue. And it was created with lots of input from landlords and renters, which is the way housing policy should be.”

“Please oppose/reconsider your sponsorship of H.5018 S.2918. Thank you.”

7. Fill out our Response Form:

https://masslandlords.net/grassroots

8. Forward these talking points

You probably know a housing provider who hasn’t been paying attention. Now is the time to get them to pay attention.

9. There are no chairs to contact.

This bill has already been voted “ought to pass” and is headed for a floor vote. Your Rep and Senator are the most important people you can talk to.

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