Voters in St. Paul and Minneapolis approved historic ballot initiatives Tuesday that will bring the cities in line with others across the country that have limited how much landlords can raise rents each year.
The two ballot questions — which in St. Paul will cap rent hikes at 3% and in Minneapolis allow city leaders to begin crafting a policy — pitted grassroots organizers against property owners who raised millions of dollars from across the country, blanketing the cities with messages urging voters to either enact a new tenant protection or avoid a potential roadblock to new development.
Claire Bergren, campaign manager of Home to Stay in Minneapolis, said advocates met opposition fundraising with hundreds of thousands of calls and text messages.
"It clearly showed that when you have conversations with voters about rent stabilization, about protecting our neighbors from unexpected, dramatic rent hikes, that it's common sense for people," she said.
Supporters said the initiatives — which would enact rent control in St. Paul in 2022 and allow Minneapolis to enact a yet-to-be-developed policy in the future — would create stability for tenants in a tight housing market where most residents are renters.
Limiting how much landlords can raise rents, advocates said, would most benefit low-income renters and renters of color, who research shows are more likely to see sharp rent increases.
Opponents, including developers, real estate interests and landlords, said they worried the policies could discourage new housing construction that the cities need. The Sensible Housing Ballot Committee, which led opposition in both cities, said in a statement late Tuesday that its members were "deeply disappointed" in the results.
"Rent control will be a major discouragement to new housing investment in our core cities," the statement said.