South Bay Examiner
  • Local news
  • News
  • Business
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Things to Do
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Facebook Twitter Instagram
South Bay Examiner
Button
  • Local news
  • News
  • Business
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Things to Do
South Bay Examiner
Home » Tenants facing mass eviction sue property owner

Tenants facing mass eviction sue property owner

0
By City News Service on June 12, 2023 Local news
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

LOS ANGELES – The Barrington Plaza Tenants Association Monday filed a lawsuit aimed at stopping the mass eviction of tenants at the 712-unit, rent-controlled apartment complex in West Los Angeles.

The suit follows an announcement by owners last month that the complex — which has been the scene of two fires over the past decade, including one that killed a 19-year-old foreign exchange student — will be closing to all renters and begin vacating occupied units so the buildings can be renovated with fire sprinklers and other safety upgrades.

Monday’s Los Angeles Superior Court complaint focuses on a state law that allows landlords to evict if they plan to remove the units from the rental market. Passed in 1985, the Ellis Act was created to allow mom-and-pop landlords to go out of the rental business and take the units off the rental market.

However, the suit contends the rent-controlled property owner, Douglas Emmett Inc., is in violation of the law and is improperly using it to justify evicting tenants.

A Douglas Emmett representative did not immediately reply to an email request for comment.

The tenant suit maintains that the landlord can make the safety upgrades without permanently displacing them.

“They want to renovate it. And they clearly want to re-rent it, and that’s not what the Ellis Act is about,” said Larry Gross, executive director of the citywide tenant group Coalition for Economic Survival.

“Under the city’s primary renovation ordinance, Douglas Emmett can install fire sprinklers without evicting tenants. The ordinance allows landlords doing major renovations to temporarily relocate residents to comparable units until the work is done, at which time tenants can move back to their units with a minor rent increase.”

The Ellis Act has been routinely used by developers to circumvent local eviction protections in order to oust low-income and working renters to convert the property into luxury hotels and condominiums, the plaintiffs’ attorneys allege — leading to what they say has been the removal of tens of thousands of rent-controlled units in Los Angeles, worsening the city’s affordable housing crisis.

The relocation fees and services provided by the city do not begin to make up for the cost and catastrophic consequences of forcing tenants out of our rent-stabilized apartments, the plaintiffs’ attorneys say.

Miki Goral, who has lived in a rent-controlled unit at Barrington Plaza for 34 years, said getting evicted would disrupt her life.

“It’s a very convenient location for my work, for public transportation,” she said. “I don’t have a car, so I depend on public transportation.”

A majority of the building’s tenants are a mix of retirees, working-class and white-collar workers, and students.

Lewis Fendell, a 50-year Barrington Plaza resident, said he recently had surgery and does not want to move. Jacqui Fournier moved to Barrington Plaza during the pandemic and pays $1,595 for a studio unit on the 10th floor.

“We want to stay in our homes,” she said. “We cannot get on the Westside a comparable apartment at what we are paying now.”

Photo source: Depositphotos

Share this:

  • Post

Like this:

Like Loading...
eviction lawsuit
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Landlords could be required to provide fridges, stoves under proposed state law

April 9, 2025

Watts activist named in suit alleging fraud at SoCal food bank

April 9, 2025

Inglewood mayor’s former assistant ordered to pay sanctions in wrongful termination suit

March 13, 2025

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Arts & Culture

Latino Theater Company celebrates 40 yearsof theater and community with ambitious 2025 season

March 1, 2025

Review: ‘Alabaster’

February 25, 2025

PJ Morton, Will Downing to headline Dymally International Jazz & Arts Festival April 26

February 6, 2025

Echo Theater Company has another exciting season of offbeat plays in store for L.A. audiences 

January 25, 2025
Entertainment

Evolving on My Own Terms: Embracing My Journey as an Artist, Entrepreneur, Innovator, and Creator

February 24, 2025

FireAid Concert On-Demand for a Year, Steve Ballmer will Continue to Match Donations

February 7, 2025

Hasbro Enhances the MONOPOLY Play Experience With Evolution of the Classic Game and New Ways to Play

January 7, 2025

Lil Wayne, Chris Brown and Marshmello Allegedly Misused Pandemic Grants to Pay Themselves or Throw Lavish Parties

December 18, 2024
Real Estate

Apartments being converted from office buildings reaches record high

February 18, 2025

East L.A. rental market is heating up!

July 22, 2024
Travel

SPIRIT AIRLINES CARRY-ON FEE CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT: CLAIM SUBMISSION NOW OPEN

November 14, 2023

Auburn University’s The Laurel Hotel & Spa receives coveted AAA Five Diamond Award for 2023

November 10, 2023

Amtrak Pacific Surfliner offering special service to San Diego

July 13, 2023

Things to Do: Bahamas is the perfect destination for your summer vacation!

July 3, 2023
Lifestyle

Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding responds to Hims & Hers Super Bowl Ad

February 7, 2025

Pepsi® kicks off iconic Pepsi Challenge with Pepsi Zero Sugar during Super Bowl weekend

February 6, 2025

Tribal Casinos initiate suit against California Cardrooms under special interest legislation SB 549

January 3, 2025

Green Label RX opens social-equity cannabis store in Canoga Park

August 21, 2024
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
© 2025 South Bay Examiner | Site by The Web Lab

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

%d