天美视频

Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

About the Authors

Dina Shek

Dina Shek is the legal director for the Medical-Legal Partnership for Children in Hawaii.

Jendrikdrik Paul

Jendrikdrik Paul is the president of the Marshallese Community Organization of Hawaii.

鈥淭he landlord said we pay him rent or move out.鈥

鈥淭he landlord sent someone to take the keys.鈥

鈥淚 know I can鈥檛 evict them, but the law doesn鈥檛 say I can鈥檛 ask for rent!鈥

These stories from families we serve demonstrate that unlawful evictions and threats to stable housing continue despite the governor鈥檚 .

We applaud the moratorium and the Legislature鈥檚 efforts to create , but it is only the first step to much-needed bolder actions if we are to prevent a tidal wave of evictions and the mass houselessness of local families.

Pacific Heights Homes.
Pictured are homes in Pacific Heights. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

Even with the blanket state prohibition on eviction actions, there are widespread reports of landlords demanding rent from tenants awaiting unemployment checks, issuing five-day eviction notices for failure to pay rent, and imposing undue pressure on tenants to 鈥渧oluntarily鈥 leave.

Further, there is essentially no enforcement for illegal evictions, allowing landlords to avoid criminal liability. Yet Honolulu have arrested hundreds for quarantine violations, including numerous homeless people.

These problems foretell the magnitude of summary possession cases that will be filed in order to enforce back rent obligations, once evictions are legally allowed again.

And while additional data is needed, many of these unlawful actions are being initiated by corporate, investment landlords. As advocates, we see the 鈥渕om and pop鈥 landlords doing more to help their tenants, despite being more economically vulnerable than their corporate counterparts.

Protect Hawaii Renters

Nearly 60 community organizations 鈥 including the and and service providers like and the 鈥 recently sent a letter to state leaders urging bold and meaningful action to protect Hawaii renters.

Hawaii鈥檚 minimum wage remains inadequate and we have minimal tenant protections and no rent controls. Hawaii had the fourth-lowest in the United States pre-COVID-19, and we now face the second highest , leaving us particularly vulnerable to rent-related housing debt.

Our letter provides a robust list of possible policy solutions including landlord 鈥渟ubsidies鈥 contingent on rent reductions and commitments not to evict tenants, an extended eviction moratorium for pandemic-related housing debt, robust and mandatory mediation efforts, and expungement of eviction records for those who end up losing their housing in court.

But other jurisdictions suggest that even bolder action might level the playing field between landlords and tenants and send a strong message that none of us will be left behind.

Hawaii had the fourth-lowest homeownership rate pre-COVID-19.

, for example, has passed to permanently ban landlords from evicting tenants for missing rent due to COVID-19 related issues such as job loss or infection from the coronavirus.

The passed a resolution that would allow the mayor to cancel rent debt that residential and business tenants may have accrued over the past three months.

To be clear, these are only to address the looming housing crises facing these American cities. However, by reducing landlords鈥 substantial power to evict their tenants over rent, such policies will surely encourage landlords to work towards a more meaningful solution for all parties.

And in both instances, the leadership is committed to establishing robust rent funds and meaningful relief that will leave both tenants and small landlords whole. They are sending a strong message that all of their residents can remain safe and that nobody will be sacrificed 鈥 neither renters nor landlords 鈥 even in the worst of times.

Our legislators cannot ignore the eviction and houselessness crisis that the governor can only stave off one month at a time.

Nor can they ignore the political pressure that large, corporate landowners will place on both tenants and policymakers, to be able to collect rent that has not been paid due to the pandemic鈥檚 economic shutdown.

By taking bold action to level the playing field now, legislators can set the stage for truly meaningful solutions necessary to prevent a future housing disaster.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


Read this next:

Neal Milner: COVID-19 Is Making Me Rethink My Past And My Future


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About the Authors

Dina Shek

Dina Shek is the legal director for the Medical-Legal Partnership for Children in Hawaii.

Jendrikdrik Paul

Jendrikdrik Paul is the president of the Marshallese Community Organization of Hawaii.


Latest Comments (0)

It's always interesting to me that the pro landlord people never talk about the increased value of a property.聽 聽What would be truly fair would be to split the increased equity with the tenant as they have basically bankrolled the venture during their tenancy.聽 聽Tenant stays for 5 years,聽 unit increases in value by $100,000, half of that should go to the tenant.聽 聽When a landlord is whining about how little they make ask them why they invest in rentals.聽 Ask them about the profit.聽 Or the ability to use the rental as collateral to borrow against.聽 聽Different kind of discussion when one looks at the entire situation.聽

CraigR · 4 years ago

Landlords have mortgages, utilities, property taxes and other expenses relating to their properties.聽 If the government is unilaterally prohibiting them from collecting rent, then the聽 government should also provide for tax credits to the landlords equal to the rent they are not collecting - that would be a fair solution.

Be_Civil · 4 years ago

Why not instead of asking landlords for everything free ask the government聽 to pay rents for needy. Landlords need to pay taxes insurance聽 ...utilities聽 many times ..people聽 to fix things. If you take away rent in a community it dose one thing ...drips investment in the area. Just look at all places with anti landlord laws ...all run down money drives up people聽 move. There is s middle ground. Have government help with rent. Teach people about credit and saving...build apartment that poor can buy cheap never sell for profit so when they move the next low income person can buy so people聽 can afford cheap housing. Let's fix the issues not blame people聽 who fix up and maintain聽 nice safe housing.

Mark2456 · 4 years ago

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