logo
Tacoma's Landlord Fairness Code: How is it related to evictions in Pierce County?

Tacoma's Landlord Fairness Code: How is it related to evictions in Pierce County?

Yahoo05-02-2025

On Wednesday, the Tacoma News Tribune published a major article on the record-breaking 3,366 evictions filed by Pierce County landlords in 2024. The headline posed the question: 'Did Tacoma 'Tenant Bill of Rights' make an impact?'
Unfortunately, this framing does more to confuse than clarify. As the campaign manager for the Tenant Bill of Rights Initiative 1 campaign, I felt it was critical to reply.
The article largely revolves around Tacoma's Initiative 1, the Landlord Fairness Code, and the suggestion that eviction moratoriums are designed to prevent (rather than delay) evictions — or even that tenant rights may be to blame for rising eviction rates.
This is a red herring, reinforced with quotes from landlord representatives who explicitly blame the Landlord Fairness Code for worsening the crisis. The obvious subtext, mentioned only briefly, is the simmering push on the Tacoma City Council to weaken tenant protections passed by voters in November 2023.
The TNT article barely touches on the most crucial fact in this debate: Evictions are at record highs across Washington State. In fact, the rate of increase was far higher in other counties.
Spokane County topped the charts with eviction increases between 80% and 120% over the historic monthly average. King County increased by about 60% most months. Meanwhile, Pierce County's monthly increase was between 20% and 48% in 2024, according to the Eviction Research Network.
It is clear that rising eviction rates cannot be explained by Tacoma-specific policies like the cold-weather eviction moratorium (Spokane has no such protections). Yet the TNT's failure to frame Pierce County's record-setting evictions within these wider statewide trends leaves readers vulnerable to these populist blame games promoted by conservative groups like the Rental Housing Association.
Eviction moratoriums don't prevent evictions outright, but they do buy tenants critical time to recover from financial hardships — such as a medical emergency or job loss — that led to missed rent payments.
The goal is to disrupt the eviction-to-homelessness pipeline — especially in the deadly winter months — and to keep kids in school even when families face financial crises.
Starting in December 2023, the Landlord Fairness Code established a school-year eviction moratorium for families with children and educators, as well as a cold-weather moratorium from November 1 to April 1. Landlords can still file evictions during this period but cannot carry them out until the moratorium ends.
The graph published in the TNT shows a sharp decline in Pierce County evictions in winter, and it was the goal of our initiative to do just that in Tacoma (there isn't data available that directly measures evictions in Tacoma proper, just at the county level). In this more limited sense, the numbers show that the Landlord Fairness Code is likely succeeding at keeping people housed rather than homeless in the deadliest conditions. However, no one should be surprised when this number spikes up again after April 1.
During the campaign to pass Initiative 1, landlord groups loudly warned that tenants would use eviction protections to free-load off landlords. This claim is recycled in the TNT article in a quote from Michael Mirra, the former head of the Tacoma Housing Authority. Landlords 'are prohibited from evicting people for not paying the rent for almost half the year, in an ordinance that makes no distinction between inability to pay and unwillingness to pay.'
The claim that a significant number of tenants are simply 'unwilling' to pay rent is both cruel and false. It casts a shadow of suspicion over thousands of families who are in financial crisis, who our economy has failed, and who don't need respected city leaders shaming them in their most vulnerable moments.
Even Sean Flynn, the head of the Rental Housing Association who led the fight against the Tenant Bill of Rights, felt compelled to acknowledge: 'Most people don't pay their rent because they don't have the money.' Flynn told TNT, 'It's not rocket science. If you have the money, you pay the rent.'
Lauren Romero, the contract attorney for Tacoma Tenant Legal Aid, previously worked at Tacomaprobono. She replied to Mirra saying:
'Out of the nearly 300 eviction defense cases I worked on, I only remember one situation that could have maybe been categorized as willful nonpayment of rent. Most of my clients were single mothers just trying to keep a roof over their kids' heads or disabled, elderly folks on fixed incomes. Nobody chooses to get an eviction on their record or to have their credit destroyed. Tenants know that it's incredibly hard to get new housing after an eviction.'
As highlighted in the TNT, Mirra is convening a study group of community leaders — including representatives from Tacoma for All — to assess the impacts of Initiative 1 on both tenants and landlords. If this study is to earn public trust, its convenor should avoid unsubstantiated claims that tenants in crisis are willfully refusing to pay rent. Responsible analysis should be rooted in statistics, not anecdotes and harmful stereotypes that stigmatize struggling families.
'The increase in eviction filings is startling and alarming,' the State Senate's former Housing Committee Chair, Patty Kuderer, told the Washington State Standard. 'There will be a tsunami of homelessness if we don't handle this correctly.'
Band-aid solutions like rental assistance programs and eviction moratoriums are needed to meet this moment. But everyone agrees that the best answer to rising evictions, homelessness and Tacoma's growing number of rent-burdened tenants is to build more affordable housing.
To meet the needs of a growing population, the city of Tacoma says we must build 43,000 new homes by 2044, with 60% of those new homes affordable to those earning less than 80% of the area median income.
This requires 1,400 new affordable homes annually — five times the current rate of production. The city's reliance on subsidizing private developers is clearly inadequate when building luxury apartments remains far more profitable. To make matters worse, City Council stripped affordability requirements for developers from the Home in Tacoma zoning reform.
Tacoma for All has long maintained that only a strong public-sector intervention can solve this crisis. A social housing developer could build tens of thousands of mixed-income homes with a modest dedicated tax revenue and by using the city's considerable bonding authority. Social housing is key to addressing the housing shortage, lowering housing costs, and creating good union jobs building green, walkable communities downtown, near the Tacoma Mall, and in other transit-centered neighborhoods.
The central argument of the Rental Housing Association and big landlords quoted in the TNT is that the Landlord Fairness Code is depressing the affordable housing supply, worsening the problems we set out to solve. So far they have cited no evidence — aside from anecdotes — that this is true. However, I sincerely hope that everyone in Tacoma who is serious about solving the affordability crisis will join Tacoma for All in the fight to build affordable housing on the scale we so desperately need.
Tyron Moore is the interim director of Tacoma For All and led the successful Tenant Bill of Rights Initiative 1 campaign. He is a longtime labor and community organizer and has been focused on the fight for housing justice for 15 years. Tyron lives in Tacoma with his wife and daughter.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Community rallies in Tacoma, WA for release of detained green card holder Maximo Londonio
Community rallies in Tacoma, WA for release of detained green card holder Maximo Londonio

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Community rallies in Tacoma, WA for release of detained green card holder Maximo Londonio

The Brief Supporters rallied for the release of Maximo "Kuya Max" Londonio, a detained labor union leader and green card holder. Londonio was detained after returning from the Philippines, with advocates highlighting systemic failures in immigration detention. The Tacoma ICE facility is reportedly over capacity, with worsening conditions and frequent deportation flights. TACOMA, Wash. - Supporters gathered outside the Northwest ICE Processing Center on Friday afternoon, calling for the release of Maximo "Kuya Max" Londonio — a longtime labor union leader, U.S. green card holder, and father of three. The rally, organized by immigrant rights groups and family members, drew dozens demanding immediate action from immigration authorities. Advocates say Londonio's detention highlights broader systemic failures and worsening conditions inside the facility. "Max is an amazing father and dedicated husband, selfless friend who deserves to be released.," his wife, Crystal Londonio said as she addressed the crowd, her voice full of emotion. Londonio, 42, was detained by Customs and Border Protection after returning from a trip to the Philippines. The visit was to honor his late mother and celebrate his wedding anniversary with Crystal. "He is not a threat, he is one of us, he is our brother," one protester shouted, as chants of solidarity echoed outside the detention center. Crystal shared her husband has a past – which they believe led to his detention. However, she said Max accepted responsibility for the mistakes he committed decades ago. "Max has taken accountability for his actions that he made more than 25 years ago, which was satisfied by all requirements set by the judicial system," Crystal said. Now, she says, he's been abandoned by both governments. "In response to being told we will just wait to see what the U.S. decides, then we will decide," Crystal said. Crystal has found support in Tanggol Migrante, a migrant advocacy network, and is now working with the organization to raise awareness about the effects of immigration detention on families. "This has impacts on the economy alright, and it's the downfall of it," said Jo Faralan of Tanggol Migrante. "Our migrants are what create our livelihood across the U.S." Advocates say Londonio's case is far from isolated — and they're demanding systemic change. "I want my husband home, my daughters want their father home now," Crystal said. The family has joined several immigrant advocacy organizations and labor unions fighting for every detainee to be released. During the rally, a bus, unclear how many passengers, entered the facility as Crystal joined the crowd chanting, "Free them all." La Resistencia, another advocacy group, reports that the Tacoma facility is currently over capacity, holding more than 1,600 detainees. The group says conditions inside are deteriorating, even as deportation flights continue at a pace of two to three per week. The Source Information in this story came from Tanggol Migrante, La Resistencia, and original FOX 13 Seattle reporting and interviews. Travis Decker manhunt: 'Remote' areas of 5 WA counties told to lock doors Former Army squadmate shares insight into Travis Decker's military past Miles Hudson found guilty on 2 counts of reckless driving in Seattle Key figures from Bryan Kohberger's youth summoned to Idaho for student murders trial Rochester dog training facility owner accused of killing employee during video shoot To get the best local news, weather and sports in Seattle for free, sign up for the daily FOX Seattle Newsletter. Download the free FOX LOCAL app for mobile in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store for live Seattle news, top stories, weather updates and more local and national news.

Amid ‘nightmare' Stanley Cup playoff ratings, can Oilers-Panthers help NHL recapture 4 Nations buzz?
Amid ‘nightmare' Stanley Cup playoff ratings, can Oilers-Panthers help NHL recapture 4 Nations buzz?

New York Times

time4 days ago

  • New York Times

Amid ‘nightmare' Stanley Cup playoff ratings, can Oilers-Panthers help NHL recapture 4 Nations buzz?

Earlier this year, the rousingly successful 4 Nations Face-Off tournament — specifically its politically charged matchups between Team USA and Team Canada — had ice hockey as hot as it's been in decades. But sagging television ratings in the United States during the 2024-25 Stanley Cup playoffs have since offered the latest confirmation of what the NHL has experienced since at least the famed 1980 'Miracle On Ice': A galvanizing international hockey moment doesn't necessarily guarantee a boost to the sport's top league. Advertisement Through this season's conference finals, ESPN and TNT platforms have experienced year-over-year viewership dips of 31 and 21 percent, respectively, with fewer than 1 million total American viewers tuning in per broadcast, according to Sports Media Watch. The Eastern Conference final between the Carolina Hurricanes and the Florida Panthers in particular struggled to attract eyeballs, finishing with a 40 percent ratings drop-off from last season's Panthers-New York Rangers series on ESPN/ABC. An executive with one of those major television networks, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the topic publicly, said that the absences of the New York Rangers, Chicago Blackhawks, Boston Bruins and Pittsburgh Penguins — four traditionally strong draws who combined to miss the playoffs for the first time since the 1967 expansion — conspired to produce 'a nightmare for ratings.' The executive continued, 'If those teams are in and even if they lose in Round 1, their fans still watch. But (as it is) they probably won't watch until the Cup Final, if we can get them back by then after all those weeks of them not paying attention.' If any Stanley Cup Final can help lure disinterested fans into the action again, it might be this Oilers-Panthers series. Not only is it the first Cup Final rematch since 2009, but the Oilers' Connor McDavid and Panthers' Matthew Tkachuk were high-profile players in those two heated U.S.-Canada games at the 4 Nations. The NHL's best player, McDavid won the tournament for Canada with an overtime goal in the tournament final. Now his career-long quest to win the Stanley Cup continues against the defending-champion Panthers, who have reached the Cup Final in each of the three seasons that Tkachuk, a rare hockey player who appears to enjoy the spotlight, has been there. Former NHL player and coach Eddie Olczyk, a longtime U.S. TV analyst who will call the series for TNT, described McDavid and Tkachuk as 'heroes and villains, depending on your side,' in a potential trilogy of Stanley Cup Final showdowns sandwiching an all-time classic installment of arguably the fiercest rivalry in international hockey. And that is without mentioning the looming return of NHL players to the Winter Olympics next February at the 2026 Milano Cortina Games, or the indisputable political undertones at a time when the relationship between the U.S. and Canada has never appeared more strained. Advertisement 'It's really important the league capitalizes on this,' said fellow former player and TNT analyst Anson Carter, adding that his family and friends in Toronto were more engaged with last season's final than in years' past because a Canadian team was trying to win the Cup for the first time since the Montreal Canadiens in 1993. 'That's going to push interest in Canada again. And I know many patriotic people down here who are into hockey (because of the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament). And having Connor back going for his Cup — this should be great for hardcore and casual fans.' For several reasons, though, television ratings for the 2024-25 Final may not accurately reflect its on-paper appeal. Whereas two of the U.S.'s most recent highest-watched hockey games, Game 7 of the 2024 Cup Final and the 4 Nations Face-Off Final, were broadcast on ABC/ESPN, this Final airs on TNT — no stranger to American sporting audiences, but also no match for ESPN's reach and branding. The Cup Final also coincides with the NBA Finals, even though games will never be played on the same nights. The NBA usurps the NHL in every measurable ratings and viewership metric in the U.S., which is not to suggest the NHL may not have received a break when the New York Knicks were eliminated by the smaller-market Indiana Pacers. Also, the Oklahoma City Thunder are a huge favorite in the NBA Finals, compared to a Cup Final that betting markets rate as a much closer contest. But a case can be made — and has been by commissioners in every league — that TV ratings are no longer the be-all and end-all for measuring interest in a tentpole sporting event such as the Cup Final in the era of streaming and social media. 'At least two critical elements will shed light on just how successful the playoffs are,' said David Carter, an adjunct professor of sports business at the University of Southern California and founder of The Sports Business Group, a specialized consulting firm. Advertisement 'First and foremost, the total number of playoff games played, as this drives direct, near-term revenue. Also, the extent to which fans, especially younger fans, are engaged on social media, because this will allow the league to more broadly market itself and tell its story, and not just during the playoffs, but over time.' Besides, even though the Cup Final is its signature event, the NHL makes most of its money on every Cup Final before the puck is even dropped. Ad buys from bigger corporate partners are multi-year deals, with likely only 20 percent remaining to be sold after the Cup Final matchup is set, said David Levy, co-CEO of Horizon Sports & Experiences and former president of Turner Broadcasting. If a particular Cup Final underperforms projected television ratings, Levy said, stressing that the Cup Final is less about making money and more about generating buzz to entice sponsors for future regular-season ad buys, unsold commercial space is customarily given back to advertisers at no extra cost. While Edmonton and South Florida probably aren't the ideal Cup Final markets, at least compared to the likes of New York, Chicago or Boston, the league can also benefit from Panthers-Oilers in continuing to strengthen its southern U.S. markets. 'On a smaller scale, having teams like the Panthers and Tampa Bay Lightning, Vegas a couple of years ago, or Dallas going deep (in the playoffs) — it makes those markets stronger, and that's great for the league,' said Michael Naraine, an associate professor of sports management at Ontario's Brock University. 'You saw that in places like Pittsburgh, dating to the 1990s when the Penguins won for the first time and were competitive. When you have sustained success in markets, even in a short window, it's the best thing for those markets. Those markets become what (NHL commissioner) Gary Bettman calls 'good hockey markets' for the NHL. It's a big part of his legacy — those non-traditional markets having success.' In the end, what Bettman wants more than anything is for more people to pay attention to hockey. Now, with a likely long series full of potential heroes and villains on the immediate horizon, and the inevitable boost of a best-on-best Winter Olympics coming next year, the NHL has the opportunity to capitalize. It just needs the stars to align, not only on the ice but perhaps politically too. Advertisement As the commissioner said during the Western Conference final, 'When you look at Game 7 last year or the 4 Nations games, including the final game, it demonstrates what we're capable of doing in two great countries.' Additional reporting by Mark Lazerus.

USWNT honors former captain Becky Sauerbrunn with bobbleheads, fireworks and a dominant win
USWNT honors former captain Becky Sauerbrunn with bobbleheads, fireworks and a dominant win

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

USWNT honors former captain Becky Sauerbrunn with bobbleheads, fireworks and a dominant win

ST. LOUIS, Mo.—Former U.S. women's national team defender Becky Sauerbrunn got a hometown hero's welcome on Tuesday at Energizer Park ahead of, during and after the U.S. defeated Jamaica 4-0 to close out a successful international window. Having retired from professional soccer last December after a 16-year career, the former captain returned not only as part of TNT's broadcast crew covering the USWNT's friendly, but also to receive a proper sendoff. Advertisement 'I'm not used to having a lot of spotlight on me for something like this, but it's really about celebrating the people who got you here,' Sauerbrunn told reporters Monday. For someone who's never been entirely comfortable in the spotlight, Tuesday night must've been overwhelming — in a good way. Sauerbrunn was born in St. Louis, Mo., and developed her game there as a budding talent until she left for the University of Virginia in 2003. Her hometown sent her off in style with a celebration that included fireworks, a very realistic bobblehead, a standing ovation and a birthday cake (she turns 40 years old on June 6) fit for a legend. 'You know you've made it when you've got a bobblehead,' U.S. head coach Emma Hayes told reporters in her pre-match press conference. A commanding presence at center back, Sauerbrunn earned 219 appearances with the U.S., anchoring the team's backline to two FIFA Women's World Cup titles and a 2012 Olympic gold medal. It's quite a legacy for someone who never sought the spotlight. And it's one the current USWNT squad deeply respects and hopes to carry forward. Advertisement As the team bid farewell to Sauerbrunn off the field, the next generation made sure she had no reason to worry about the future on it. Hayes's squad delivered a dominant 4-0 win over Jamaica, applying relentless pressure for 90 minutes with 82 percent possession and allowing only two shots from the opposition. Though the accomplished defender never got her goal for the U.S., Sauerbrunn came very close two years ago at the same stadium that bid her goodbye. On Tuesday, it was rookie Ally Sentnor who scored twice in the first half and Sauerbrunn's close friend Lynn Biyendolo who added two more as soon as she came on after the break. Meanwhile, the backline, Saurebrunn's old territory, was anchored by captain Naomi Girma, a fitting torchbearer for the legacy left behind. 'I know I just said nobody can (fill Becky's shoes), but I think the next obvious person would be Naomi,' Biyendolo said. 'The two things that they have in common are that they didn't want the role, but it just found them. And I think that makes the best leaders, is somebody who just doesn't want it, but it's so natural at it.' Girma, the most expensive transfer in women's soccer history, had a rocky start at Chelsea after joining in January, sidelined by a string of injuries. However, she is back and delivering. With both a Women's Super League title and an FA Cup under her belt, she is proving to be worth every penny. As Hayes put it, bringing her back 'is like getting the Rolls-Royce out of the garage.' Advertisement Girma told that she thinks 'Becky was one of the best leaders this team has ever had.' That kind of legacy doesn't happen overnight. Listening to her former teammates after the match, it was clear: the trust and respect Sauerbrunn commands were built over years of grit, consistency, and quiet leadership, beginning with her debut in 2008, when she earned her first cap against Canada at the Four Nations Tournament in China, playing through the match with a broken nose. 'Becky is a legend, an icon,' Kerry Abello, who made her debut for the U.S. on Tuesday, said after the match. 'The game of women's soccer will never be the same without her.' Advertisement Abello was only nine years old when Sauerbrunn debuted in 2008. Like many new generation of USWNT players, she grew up looking up to her. On the pitch, Sauerbrunn was a tireless, dependable center back; off it, she was a steady leader who played a key role in collective bargaining negotiations with the U.S. Soccer, representing her teammates at the table year after year, and helping the team achieve equal pay. She was always calm and composed, even when one of her teammates messed up. 'Becky doesn't get mad often, but if you mess up, like pass to the wrong player… she'll give you this look,' Biyendolo said after the match. 'That 'I'm not mad, I'm just disappointed' look. That's the Becky look.' Ask anyone who played alongside Sauerbrunn about the 'Becky stare,' and they'll know exactly what you're talking about. Advertisement Hayes didn't get the chance to coach Sauerbrunn—she took over the U.S. team in May 2024— but her admiration also runs deep, especially for how the defender has shaped the next generation. 'It's always nice when the people you leave behind talk about someone in such a way,' Hayes said. 'I can say this without hesitation, I've got a locker room not just the senior players, but less experienced players that talk about her in the highest esteem, both as a leader and as a human being, and I don't think you could want anything more than that in life.' This article originally appeared in The Athletic. US Women's national team, Portland Thorns, NWSL 2025 The Athletic Media Company

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store