Also today: Zohran Mamdani says he would end gifted programs from NYC schools. |
|
US cities from Oakland, California, to Rochester, New York, have been using rental registries to track who owns rental properties and requiring regular inspections in an effort to improve apartment quality and protect tenants from unsafe living conditions. Housing advocates say these programs fill critical information gaps in the rental market and hold negligent landlords accountable. But landlords have been fighting such programs. For nearly two decades, efforts to pass rental registry ordinances in Pittsburgh have been thwarted by lawsuits accusing the city of overreach and of placing excessive burden on property owners. A new battle is currently winding its way through the legal system. Read more from contributor Patrick Sisson today on CityLab: With Rental Registries, Cities Seek to Close Data Gap With Landlords — Arvelisse Bonilla Ramos | |
|
|
-
The housing hustle igniting a foreclosure crisis in Baltimore (Baltimore Banner) -
LA 2028 Olympics: Fears of mass displacement and homeless sweeps as Trump threat looms (Guardian) -
Massive immigration raid on Chicago apartment building leaves residents reeling: “I feel defeated” (Chicago Sun-Times) -
Hours before the Eaton fire, distribution lines failed and fire started in Altadena (NPR) | |
Have something to share? Email us. And if you haven’t yet signed up for this newsletter, please do so here. | |
|
|
You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's CityLab Daily newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, sign up here to get it in your inbox. | | |