Where will I live?—This is the question that haunts California's 17 million renters. 55% of Californians are rent burdened, paying more than 30% of their income on rent and there is no end in sight. Rent increases are far outstripping pay increases. A starting teacher, cop, or fire fighter is paying half their salary to afford the average apartment in California's cities. Many who live on a fixed income are one rent increase away from homelessness— and seniors represent the fastest growing homeless population. Something has to give. The affordable housing crisis is destroying the California Dream.
California, the Golden State, was once the land of opportunity. However, things have changed dramatically. Nearly one million people have left California in the last five years. If this mass exodus continues, it will have catastrophic consequences for our state. California faces a $68 billion deficit which will only get worse as young talented people leave and the needy remain.
We love California. It is a land of natural beauty. We are at the cutting edge of technological innovation with vast amounts of wealth. Yet, based on the cost of living, we are the poorest state in America. We have way too many seniors, single parents, low-wage workers, and veterans choosing between paying rent and putting food on the table.
The housing crisis is complex. There isn't one magic bullet to solve it, but the place we have to start is keeping people in their homes. The only practical way to do it is to allow local government to enact and expand rent control because one size doesn't fit all. What's practical for Los Angeles doesn't work in Los Gatos.
We need to build more affordable housing and preserve the affordable units we have. But while we are waiting, we need to protect tenants and keep them housed—when you're in a hole, stop digging.
Rent control is an American tradition since 1919 and works well in many cities. It was largely shut down in 1995 when the landlord lobby convinced Sacramento to drastically curtail it. Ever since, corporate landlords have made sure that the Legislature doesn't modify the law no matter how bad things get.
We understand that mom and pop landlords have invested their life savings into their buildings and can identify with the plight of their tenants. The CA Constitution guarantees them a reasonable rate of return. But it is the billionaire corporate landlords who are calling the shots and causing skyrocketing rents.
Even if you are not a renter, your quality of life and the value of your property are still harmed by the housing crisis. Proposition 33 will return fairness to the equation. Visit www.yeson33.org
Supporters: California Democratic Party, Veterans' Voices, California Nurses Association, CA Alliance for Retired Americans, Housing Is a Human Right, American Federation of Teachers 1521, 2121, Tenants Together, Consumer Watchdog, Coalition for Economic Survival, Social Security Works, Mental Health Advocacy, Housing NOW, ACCE, UNITE HERE Local 11
Basil Kimbrew, Executive Director
Veterans' Voices
Pauline Brooks, Board President
California Alliance for Retired Americans
William Arroyo, Board President
AIDS Healthcare Foundation / Housing Is a Human Right
They're at it again. Proponents of Prop. 33 have taken millions of taxpayer dollars—money that is supposed to be used to help low-income HIV and AIDS patients—and spent it on yet another of their anti-housing crusades. Once again, they are pushing a measure that will hurt small mom and pop landlords.
AHF, which has received billions of taxpayer dollars meant to serve patients, has diverted that money to pay for things that have nothing to do with healthcare—building their own real estate empire, while housing people in slum-like conditions in buildings they refuse to fix, and being fined repeatedly for their misuse of funds.
Just like this measure, AHF is not what it appears to be. But don't take our word for it. Read the stories that show AHF's true colors:
One of the state's largest slumlords https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2023-11-16/aids-healthcare-foundation-low-income-housing-landlords
Even allowing a blind tenant to fall down an open elevator shaft https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2023-01-20/ahf-madison-hotel-elevator-lawsuit-story
While they claim to fight for tenants, they are throwing low-income tenants out on the street, while suing dozens of poor people in small-claims court: https://www.poz.com/article/aids-healthcare-foundation-reportedly-houses-tenants-squalid-conditions
Meanwhile, they are wasting taxpayer dollars on lawsuits to block new housing https://www.sfchronicle.com/politics/article/Lawsuit-seeks-to-block-Scott-Wiener-s-rezoning-16480766.php and spending millions on political campaigns to push its no-growth agenda: https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-aids-foundation-political-spending-20170221-story.html
The state even terminated its multi-million dollar contracts with AHF, citing "improper negotiation tactics" https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-06-30/california-aids-healthcare-foundation-state-contract
And audits by LA County found AHF overcharged taxpayers by millions https://archive.kpcc.org/blogs/politics/2013/07/18/
14304/aids-healthcare-foundation-asks-judge-to-delay-la/
Don't be misled by AHF's latest scheme to fool California voters. Vote No on Prop. 33.
Michael Hedges, President
California Small Business Association
Julian Canete, President
California Hispanic Chambers of Commerce
Rev. Dwight Williams, Chair
California Senior Alliance
PROP. 33 IS A DEEPLY FLAWED SCHEME THAT WILL INCREASE HOUSING COSTS AND BLOCK AFFORDABLE HOUSING
If Prop. 33 seems familiar, it's because nearly 60% of California voters rejected the same flawed scheme in 2018 and 2020. Seniors, veterans, and affordable housing experts all oppose Prop. 33 because it will make the housing crisis dramatically worse. The Housing Action Coalition calls Prop. 33 "deeply flawed and deceptively anti-housing."
Here's why you should vote NO on Prop. 33:
FUNDED BY NOTORIOUS SLUMLORD
Prop. 33 was written and bankrolled by Corporate CEO Michael Weinstein of AHF. The Los Angeles Times describes Weinstein as a "slumlord" with a long record of health and safety violations and unfair evictions. State housing regulators cited his residents living in "squalid conditions, exposed to roach and bedbug infestations."
NOT WHAT IT SEEMS. PROP. 33 IS A TROJAN HORSE THAT OVERTURNS STATE AFFORDABLE HOUSING LAWS
Prop. 33 is misleading. The measure could effectively overturn more than 100 state housing laws, including laws making it easier to build affordable housing, and fair housing and tenant eviction protections. It could also strip the Attorney General's ability to enforce certain current housing laws. It's why one of the state's most notorious corporate "slumlords" is bankrolling Prop. 33.
WORSENS HOUSING CRISIS
Economists and housing experts at Stanford and UC Berkeley say Prop. 33 will make California's housing crisis significantly worse by reducing the construction of new affordable housing. Prop. 33 will make it harder to become a homeowner or find a place to rent, driving up costs for renters and home buyers.
ELIMINATES HOMEOWNER PROTECTIONS
Prop. 33 takes away basic protections for homeowners and allows bureaucrats, politicians, and regulators to tell single-family homeowners how much they can charge to rent out a single room. Millions of homeowners will be treated just like corporate landlords and subject to regulations and price controls enacted by unelected boards.
WEAKENS RENTER PROTECTIONS
Prop. 33 undermines the strongest statewide rent control law in the nation signed by Governor Newsom and has no protections for renters.
REDUCES HOME VALUES UP TO 25%
Non-partisan researchers at MIT estimate extreme rent control measures like this result in an average reduction in home values up to 25%. Californians can't afford to take another hit with the economic collapse threatening their home values and life savings.
OFFERS NO PROTECTIONS FOR SENIORS, VETERANS, OR THE DISABLED
Prop. 33 has no protections for seniors, veterans, or the disabled. Veterans, seniors, and social justice organizations agree it's the last thing we need right now.
OPPOSED BY A BROAD BIPARTISAN COALITION
Democrats and Republicans agree Prop. 33 will make the housing crisis worse. Opponents include:
DEMAND REAL HOUSING SOLUTIONS
We should Vote "NO" on Prop. 33 and demand real solutions.
VOTE NO ON PROPOSITION 33. Learn more at NoOnProp33.com
Ken Rosen, Economics Professor Emeritus
UC Berkeley
Jenna Abbott, Executive Director
California Council for Affordable Housing
Kendra Moss, Advisory Member
Women Veterans Alliance
Who do you believe? The billionaire landlords behind the California Apartment Association which has spent hundreds of millions of dollars opposing renter protections? Or do you believe the AIDS Healthcare Foundation—the largest AIDS organization in the world—Veterans' Voices, the Coalition for Economic Survival, 100 local elected officials, and the cities of San Francisco, Santa Monica, and West Hollywood?
The billionaire landlords will fill the airwaves and your mailbox with lies and deceptions paid for by extorting exorbitant rents from people on social security or disability.
Our proposition is just 23 words. It allows cities to regulate rents the way they did until 1995 when Sacramento, at the demand of these same billionaires, took that right away— nothing more. Every city will decide for themselves whether or not they need rent control.
Academics and non-profits for hire will say anything the billionaire landlords want them to for a price.
Believe your own eyes. We are facing a $68 billion deficit made worse by the one million people who have left California. More than half of California's 17 million renters are paying more than 30% of their income on rent.
The billionaire landlords are using fear to get homeowners and renters to vote against your own interests. Homeowners will only benefit from healthy communities. Renters are desperate to remain in their homes.
Rent control is an American tradition since 1919. New York and many other cities with rent control have only seen property values soar.
Vote Yes—the rent is too damn high.
Sandy Reding, President
California Nurses Association
Pauline Brooks, Board President
California Alliance for Retired Americans
Larry Gross, Executive Director
Coalition for Economic Survival
Arguments printed on this page are the opinions of the authors and have not been checked for accuracy by any official agency.