Creating a level of safety
O’Rourke’s legislation specifically takes aim at Philadelphia’s property maintenance code.
In addition to the anti-displacement fund, O’Rourke wants to give the city’s Department of Licenses and Inspections more power — and funding — to enforce the code.
The department, for example, currently has the authority to immediately suspend a landlord’s rental license if a property is deemed “unfit and unsafe or imminently dangerous.” O’Rourke wants the department to automatically suspend a landlord’s license if they have not appealed the designation after 30 days. The suspension would remain in place until the landlord has made any necessary repairs.
Under the legislation, the department and the landlord would be required to notify tenants that there is no active license for the property. Under city law, it is illegal for landlords to collect rent without a valid license.
“We gotta put a timer on how long a landlord can be negligent before their license is actually revoked. It can’t be as arbitrary as it is currently,” O’Rourke said.
The department would consider a dwelling unfit if there is sewage backed up in the basement or a lack of heat in the winter. Inspectors would consider a property unsafe or imminently dangerous if there are serious problems with the structure, including the possibility or likelihood of a collapse.
O’Rourke’s measure also gives tenants the ability to collect damages if they file a lawsuit for non-compliance and they are successful. This would include monetary damages of up to $2,000 per unit or compensatory damages in the form of a refund for any rent collected illegally.
The legislative package is also designed to better protect low-income tenants who speak out about hazardous living conditions at rental properties. Housing advocates say the city has a history of landlords retaliating against these tenants, creating a chilling effect that can keep people in harm’s way.
If the legislation is approved, landlords would be expressly barred from ending or modifying a tenant’s lease simply because that tenant is cooperating with a city investigation, has discussed their living conditions with a councilmember or news reporter, or joined a tenant organization.
The legislation also defines tenant harassment and provides examples, which include “failing to perform or complete repairs and maintenance in a timely manner,” “interfering with a tenant’s quiet enjoyment of their residence,” and “threatening a tenant or their guests with physical harm.”
“We want to make sure that the housing that’s being provided is humane in the first place. And I think when humans are allowed to speak out without fear of retaliation or harassment for speaking out, then I think we’re only creating that level of safety,” O’Rourke said.
Under the measure, a court could award compensatory damages and restitution if a judge finds that a landlord has violated the law.