After months of weekly meetings, a group of St. Paul tenants, landlords, homeowners and housing experts delivered a handful of broad ideas for honing the rent control ordinance voters approved last year.
Now the policy's fate lies in the hands of elected officials, who will decide if and how to amend the law capping annual residential rent increases at 3%.
According to a 36-page report from the University of Minnesota's Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), which facilitated the task force's conversations, 60% of members support a policy that would exempt new housing construction from the law for 15 years and allow landlords to bank rent increases below 3% for future years. They also said they would like a law that prevents renters from being evicted without just cause.
A majority of group members also supported allowing landlords more flexibility to raise rents in between tenants, though the report did not specify how that would work.
In February, Mayor Melvin Carter appointed members of the 39-person group, which he tasked with suggesting tweaks to St. Paul's rent control ordinance that would balance the city's desire for equity and growth.
Minnesota's capital city became the first in the Midwest to implement rent control when voters passed an ordinance by ballot initiative in November. A 1984 state law prohibits local governments from enacting rent regulations unless approved in a general election.
St. Paul's ordinance is considered among the most stringent policies of its kind because it does not allow landlords to raise rents once a tenant moves out, does not exempt new construction and is not tied to inflation.
Upon passage, the law immediately drew warnings from developers and property owners, who said rent control will exacerbate St. Paul's existing housing shortage. Calls for changes to the ordinance drew backlash from supporters, who have said amendments defy the will of the electorate.