The St. Paul City Council is one step closer to changing the city's rent-control ordinance to exempt new housing construction for 20 years.
Though the seven-person elected body has yet to approve a final set of amendments to the law, members on Wednesday debated and voted on a handful of proposed changes to the policy, which caps residential rent increases at 3%.
Since voters approved the city ordinance in November, developers have urged elected officials to exempt new housing, citing projects they paused or canceled after the law's passage prompted investors to back out. Because St. Paul is perhaps the only U.S. city to apply rent control to new construction, they say they are moving their money to less risky markets.
Supporters of the policy have pushed back, accusing developers of fear mongering. They also said such an exemption could incentivize property owners to tear down and rebuild existing housing to reset rents.
Data on construction permits, and what the numbers imply about the policy's early impacts on development, have complicated the debate. Rent-control opponents used figures to claim permits are down as much as 80%, while supporters of the law pointed to different numbers to argue that applications for permits have risen in 2022.
The conflicting claims came about because data sets from the city and federal Department of Housing and Urban Development included duplicate permit counts, said Nicolle Goodman, director of St. Paul's Department of Planning and Economic Development.
City analysts cleaned up the data to present a more accurate picture of permitting trends in St. Paul. But Goodman cautioned officials that the data "should be considered with many caveats and with the understanding, always, that correlation does not necessarily indicate causation."
"Another caution is that a number of other market factors influence whether or not a project moves forward at any given time — cost of labor, materials, availability of subsidies, interest rates, etc.," she said.