HB 1236 has been scheduled for a public hearing Tuesday, January 26th at 8:00am in the Housing, Human Services and Veterans Committee.
WE NEED YOUR VOICE TO HELP OPPOSE HB 1236
For a more detailed summary of the legislation click here. Below are some key talking points about the effects of HB 1236:
The most effective way to have your voice heard is to provide written testimony today at the link below: Provide Your Testimony - Link
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Rent Control Bill SB 5139 Scheduled for Public Hearing
SB 5139 has been scheduled for a public hearing Thursday January 21st at 8:00 am in the Senate Housing and Local Government Committee WE NEED YOUR VOICE TO STOP RENT CONTROL! · SB 5139 will prohibit a housing provider from increasing rent or other charges for the first 6 months after the end of the Governor’s emergency eviction ban. · After the first 6 months expire, housing providers are then limited to only increasing rent by 3% over the previous year’s consumer price index, for a subsequent 6 months, based on the rental rate as it was on March 1, 2020. SB 5139 would seek to aggressively limit rent increases in a period where lawmakers have decided to prevent the enforcement of rental payments. Small housing providers are faced with a total lack of protections for large increases in property taxes, utility costs, and potential devastation of their credit with lenders. Rent control has proven to be a terrible policy for both housing providers, city planners and tenants alike. The policy creates perverse incentives, shadow markets, and punishes maintenance and reinvestment in residences. It locks tenants into their rental properties forcing people to commute farther and farther to their places of employment, and allows more affluent renters to pay reduced rent rates, blocking the units from being available to those in need. Sign up to testify here. Please register for our Rental Housing Coalition Grassroots Briefing Room here, where we will be discussing the future of this bill and others on a weekly basis every Monday at 10:00 am. Speak directly to lobbyists, industry attorneys and government affairs staff who can help you share your voice. You can contact the Senators in the Housing and Local Government Committee directly at their emails below: Chair Patty Kuderer - patty.kuderer@leg.wa.gov Vice Chair Mona Das - mona.das@leg.wa.gov Phil Fortunato - phil.fortunato@leg.wa.gov Chris Gildon – chris.gildon@leg.wa.gov Shelly Short - shelly.short@leg.wa.gov Annette Cleveland - annette.cleveland@leg.wa.gov Liz Lovelett - liz.lovelett@leg.wa.gov Jesse Salomon - jesse.salomon@leg.wa.gov Judy Warnick - judith.warnick@leg.wa.gov --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SB 5160 Eviction Ban Bill Scheduled for Public Hearing SB 5160 has been scheduled for a public hearing Wednesday January 20th at 10:30am in the Senate Housing and Local Government Committee WE NEED YOUR VOICE TO OPPOSE THIS DEVASTATING POLICY PROPOSAL · SB 5160 also mandates that housing providers renew any rental agreement or month-to-month tenancy for 2 years after the end of the emergency period ends, unless the property owner sells the unit, or moves into the unit themselves. · SB 5160 will prevent any eviction for nonpayment of rent that occurred during the COVID emergency period · SB 5160 requires any debt that is outstanding during the emergency period can be pursued in through collection actions only if the housing provider has offered a payment plan as defined in the bill. · SB 5160 mandates that all tenants have access to state funded counsel in an unlawful detainer, automatically seals court records, and increases the filing fee for unlawful detainers These two policies will have a devastating effect on small housing providers who are already strapped financially from increasing costs and missing income in 2020. Many small housing providers are desperately searching for a way to have their units create income to pay taxes, utilities, mortgages, and keep staff employed. The Legislature should be focus on polices that protect both housing providers and tenants who have been damaged through no fault of their own by the government shutdowns in response to the COVID pandemic. This is not the year to pursue broad changes to the eviction process, or contested landlord-tenant laws. You can sign up to testify here. Please register for our Rental Housing Coalition Grassroots Briefing Room here, where we will be discussing the future of this bill and others on a weekly basis every Monday at 10am. Speak directly to lobbyists, industry attorneys and government affairs staff who can help you share your voice. You can contact the Senators in the Housing and Local Government Committee directly at their emails below: Chair Patty Kuderer - patty.kuderer@leg.wa.gov Vice Chair Mona Das - mona.das@leg.wa.gov Phil Fortunato - phil.fortunato@leg.wa.gov Chris Gildon – chris.gildon@leg.wa.gov Shelly Short - shelly.short@leg.wa.gov Annette Cleveland - annette.cleveland@leg.wa.gov Liz Lovelett - liz.lovelett@leg.wa.gov Jesse Salomon - jesse.salomon@leg.wa.gov Judy Warnick - judith.warnick@leg.wa.gov You can find a detailed summary of SB 5160 here. Written & Distributed From the Offices of Baldwin & Blake,
Public Affairs Consultants Urging all WLA Members to Electronically Sign in Opposition or Sign in to Testify Virtually to OPPOSE SB 5096
Sponsors: Senators: Robinson By Request: Office of Financial Management STATUS SB: Senate Ways and Means Committee Hearing: Thursday, January 14 at 4:00 p.m. § To Sign up to Submit written testimony, § Testify virtually in Opposition of, or § To Provide opposition to be noted for the legislative record, click here. Please also contact the members of the Senate Ways & Means Committee urging them to OPPOSE SB 5096 Senate Ways & Means Committee Members - PDF LINK Note: Member Contact Info is located on page 2 of the attached PDF Please take action right away!! Hello WLA Members:
For your general information, the 2021 Legislative Session begins January 11th and adjourns Sunday, April 25th. To download this email as a PDF please click here To download more information about accessing the legislature click here Meetings with Legislators Meetings will be held virtually this year primarily over Zoom (Legislators will also be using Microsoft Teams to conduct caucus meetings). These zoom meetings will mostly be the usual 15-minute intervals as they would in person, but some may run longer or shorter. If you are participating in a scheduled meeting, please be block off 30 minutes to provide a logistical cushion to maximize our time with the Legislator and accommodate their busy schedules. Brevity will also be crucial to ensure we get all our priorities heard and answer any questions the Legislator may have. How to Watch Committee Hearings TVW has committed to continuing their partnership with the State of Washington to broadcast all committee hearings and Floor activity. We will provide updates, summaries and notifications regarding important hearings but below are links to view them on your own: Committee hearing information can be found here Watch online at: www.tvw.org Testifying During Committees With the Capital Campus restricted to only a handful of state employees and Legislators attending these meetings virtually, folks wishing to testify will need to do so remotely. Remote testimonies have been used sparingly over the past few years in certain designated off campus sites such as colleges, community centers and other public places. This year the Legislature has taken away restrictions on where a person can testify. How to Register to Testify Remotely 1. Select the committee and meeting date and time, then select the bill for which you would like to testify remotely. The link to testify is here. 2. Select “I would like to Testify Live During the Hearing.” Remote testimony registration will close 1 hour before the start time of the hearing. Anyone who does not register before this deadline will be unable to testify before the committee. 3. Ensure your registration information is accurate. It will be a part of the legislative record and used by TVW for online and television graphics. Additional Information about Testifying · Those who register for remote testimony will be emailed a Zoom link to the meeting upon registration. Each link is unique to the registrant. Registrants are prohibited from sharing links. · You may participate via videoconference or phone. See instructions on how to connect to the meeting. · There is no guarantee that those who register to testify will be allowed to speak or be able to speak at specific times. You may be required to limit your comments. · Maintain proper meeting decorum, including waiting to be acknowledged by the Chair before speaking and following rules for testimony established by the Chair. · Committee and technical staff may not be able to address any connection or technical issues you may experience before or during the committee meeting. Anyone who fails to follow the rules for testimony established by the Chair may forfeit their opportunity to testify. Legislators are being asked to follow in person dress codes and decorum while virtually attending these meetings, we recommend you do the same when testifying remotely. Commenting on Bills The best way to comment on a bill is direct communication with your districts’ legislators. If you have a good relationship with them and have their cell, text and calls are the most effective. If you do not have their cell phone number or feel like you have a close enough relationship to call, then email their office. You can find their contact information here. We recommend sending it to the Legislator but also cc’ing the Legislative Aide. Lastly, there is also a process to comment on a bill over the Legislative website which you can do here. These are sent to Legislators but don’t always get seen by every Legislator as their staff usually screens these comments and may not prioritize those comments. How to Submit Written Testimony When a Bill has a Hearing: 1. Select the committee and meeting date and time, then select the bill for which you would like to submit written testimony. The link to submit written testimony is here. 2. Select “I would like to Submit Written Testimony.” Written testimony will close 24 hours after the start time of the hearing. 3. Provide your written comments in the form. Your comments will be sent to legislative members and staff of the committee and will be included in the legislative record for bill and meeting archival purposes but will not be used as part of testimony summary materials on the bill report. Virtual Day in Olympia Normally a day in Olympia would mean a whole day spent with as many Legislative meetings we can schedule, a lunch with keynote speakers, a possible reception and so much more that isn’t logistically possible in this year’s session. We will continue to have meetings scheduled that day virtually, but we could choose to focus our efforts on two main events: A virtual Legislative lunch and a virtual Legislative reception. A virtual Legislative lunch could have a format that follows open attendance during the noon hour, with a keynote presentation and possible speaker for 10 minutes at a scheduled time during the hour (12:30pm). Prior to the presentation as Legislators enter, we would introduce them and after the presentation we could open it up to questions members may have for the Legislators. A virtual reception could be very similar but in a more relaxed setting where we could encourage fun drinks and snacks. We would likely have the same presentation (hopefully with different legislators in attendance) and perhaps play an interactive game like trivia or something else to engage Legislators. Campus Security Update With recent events at our nation’s capital and here on our Olympia capital campus we would like to share the information given to the Third House during a phone call with the head of Senate Security. As you already know this is a “Virtual” session for 2021 and it will present many challenges for all. Security at the campus will be the maximum level with emphasis on the first two weeks. Here are the main issues shared during the call. 1. The only entrance to the campus is a security check point on Sid Snyder Drive. 2. Only Legislative employees with I.D. will be able to enter the campus. This was emphasized “No I.D. No Access” to the grounds. 3. All building entrances will be physically guarded for entry. All key card access has been disabled at this time. 4. All “Visitor Parking” is closed. This if for the entire campus, east and west. To summarize the message from security was, stay home for your own safety and the safety of others. We know this session is going to be difficult for all of us. Sincerely, Chester Baldwin, Lobbyist |
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