Lengthy-Time Tenants Get $475,000 Buyout To Transfer Out Of House – CBS San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF / AP) – Even in the wacky world of real estate, San Francisco has a $ 475,000 voluntary buyout that was offered to a couple to move out of the apartment they’ve lived in for three decades Attention from social media and local residents attracted residents.
The voluntary purchase is considered the largest in the city’s history and reflects the high quality of the apartment.
CONTINUE READING: COVID: Pediatricians in the Bay Area are preparing as the FDA considers approving a vaccine for children ages 5-11
The tenants, a couple in their 60s with teenage children, had recently paid $ 12,500 a month for a seven-bed, eight-bath apartment. It occupies most of a floor in a centuries-old building and offers expansive views of the bay, the Golden Gate Bridge, and the nearby Presidio Park. They refused to be named.
San Francisco has one of the strongest tenant protections in the country, which encourages tenants to hold onto the apartments as market prices rise. While California recently introduced rental price caps and other tenant protection measures, San Francisco passed its rental price ordinance back in 1979 to alleviate the city’s housing crisis.
This means that landlords can only increase the rent for some properties by a certain amount each year, with the current increase being less than 1%. Landlords cannot terminate tenants without good cause, such as failure to pay rent. Owners who want to move into their own family home have to pay tenants for the evacuation. The maximum amount renters in a unit can receive for moving is $ 22,000, with an additional $ 5,000 for households with minor children or seniors 60 and over.
In this case there were no moving costs; The landlord and tenant have made a voluntary departure agreement.
Steven Adair MacDonald, the lawyer representing the couple, said the reaction was split to a six-figure buyout, which is enough to buy a home in most parts of the country.
“The landlord’s lawyers think it’s cheek and everyone on the tenant’s side is excited, they think it’s great,” he said. However, MacDonald believes the landlord will be the winner as they can rent the apartment for $ 25,000 a month and recoup the amount in just over three years.
“It’ll be a sauce after that, so it’s a great investment,” said MacDonald.
MacDonald is also suing landlord Friedman Properties on behalf of “fairly well-heeled” tenants in nine other units who moved out since March and can’t stand the constant noise and dust of ongoing renovations in the building.
CONTINUE READING: Body Clock Boost: Afternoon workouts can be a benefit to getting in shape, researchers say
Marty Friedman, listed as the Company’s authorized representative, did not respond to a call for comment.
KPIX asked the landlord’s attorney, David Wasserman, for an opinion on the buyout.
He stated that constructive clearance was never the landlord’s intention, noting that the landlord had several much-needed renovation and maintenance projects planned prior to the pandemic. These projects got complicated after the San Francisco pandemic led to the stay at home order.
The Financial Times was the first to report on the agreement.
In 2020, more than 300 rental purchases were submitted by tenants to the San Francisco Rent Board. The average takeovers are $ 50,000, according to MacDonald, and they’re increasing given the difference between market rent and tenant length of stay.
San Francisco rents fell during the pandemic but are still among the highest in the country. The average rent for a one-bedroom apartment is $ 2,750, according to the Zumper rental platform. The average sales price for a home is $ 1.5 million, according to Redfin.
Tenant groups say that without the rent cap, poor and working-class residents would be evicted from San Francisco because they would not be able to keep up with market rents.
Charley Goss, who is in charge of government affairs for the San Francisco Apartment Association, said landlords accept that rent control is part of doing business in the city. But there are situations where wealthier tenants are clinging to a rent-controlled apartment, he said. The association represents around 4,500 landlords.
“Paying half a million dollars to a wealthy person who has a rent-pegged apartment in a city with housing shortages and an affordability crisis speaks to the way our local rent-cap is distorting the market,” he said.
MORE NEWS: COVID: Dozens of unvaccinated San Francisco police officers, firefighters face deadline
© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All rights reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report