The threat of eviction hangs constantly over Dean Zoller, a crisis counselor and single father of three teenagers.
At the onset of COVID-19 last spring, he moved into a remodeled rental house in north Minneapolis, he said, when his relationship ended and he had to scramble to find a new place after more than a decade of homeownership.
But then the hidden fees began to heap. There was a $10 "property administration fee." Zoller said the online portal would crash when he tried to pay rent and he racked up 8% late fees. And even though he had set up the utilities in his own name according to the move-in instructions, the landlord continued to charge him $25 service fees per utility.
Zoller had moved into a HavenBrook Homes property, one of hundreds in north Minneapolis owned by a New York investment firm with more than 55,000 single-family rentals across the United States. It has a local office in Roseville, but tenants complain that its staff is unresponsive.
"The thing about these corporate landlords is that they're much more like a nameless, faceless entity that folks can't get ahold of, they can't understand what's going on, they pay all these fees and it's not clear what the fees are even covering, and in some cases may be illegal," said Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid lawyer Luke Grundman.
Nationwide, millions of families rent from real estate investment trusts or private equity firms. Critics accuse the institutional investors-turned-landlords of trying to maximize profits through relentless rent hikes while neglecting the costly upkeep of old homes.
A company spokesman pushed back. "HavenBrook-managed affiliates purchased rundown homes in North Minneapolis during a period of time when others were neglecting the community," Mike Geller of public relations firm Prosek Partners said in an e-mail. He said HavenBrook spent an average of more than $39,000 on initial renovations after purchasing each home, as well as an additional $17,000 per home on repairs from 2015-2020.
The single-family home rental industry emerged out of the mortgage and housing crisis of 2007, when institutional investors bought up multitudes of foreclosed homes for conversion into rentals. Other major players include Apollo Global Management's Inspire Communities and Cerberus-owned FirstKey Homes.