Creating documentation for the company or individual requirements is always a significant obligation.
When forming a contract, a public service inquiry, or a power of attorney, it’s crucial to take into account all federal and state laws of the specific area.
However, smaller counties and even municipalities also have legislative processes that you must consider.
To find the one that meets your specifications, use the search bar in the header of the page.
A: Under the State's COVID-19 rental protections tenants cannot be evicted if, due to COVID-19 financial distress, they cannot pay rent that came due during the covered periodMarch 1, 2020 until September 30, 2021. So, a tenant must resume regular rent payments beginning October 1, 2021.
A: Rent levels for all controlled units (generally, all multi-family units built before February 1995) have been frozen during the emergency. However, as of , landlords may serve tenants with notices of rent increases for no more than the current cap, which is 2.7%.
Because of the Rent Increase freeze in Ordinance No. 3275, a Landlord is precluded from increasing the Tenant's Rent by 2.8% until January 1, 2021. Assume that the Annual General Adjustment for the period September 1, 2020 and August 31, 2021 is 2%.
Residents of Alameda County are protected by the County's eviction moratorium until 60 days after the expiration of the local health emergency, which is still in effect.
Alameda's City Rent Control Ordinance regulates how much a tenant's rent can be raised annually, protects tenants from eviction unless there is a just-cause reason to do so under the law, provides relocation to tenants, regulates buyout agreements, and prohibits landlord retaliation against tenants.
California is one of two states to have statewide rent control, because of AB 1482 rent increases cannot go beyond 5% plus the cost of living or 10% each year, whichever is higher. This new law only applies to older buildings built before 2005.
Beginning , landlords of most Alameda rental units may serve their tenant with rent increase notices of no more than 2.7%, after the Alameda City Council adopted new legislation altering the moratorium on rent increases.
A Program Fee of $148 is imposed on every rental property owner in the City of Alameda for each Fully Regulated Unit owned.
Beginning , landlords of most Alameda rental units may serve their tenant with rent increase notices of no more than 2.7%, after the Alameda City Council adopted new legislation altering the moratorium on rent increases.