Eighty-Four Years of Editorial'Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 PIRGIM reports: Rent control WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1974 The rent rate ranking game AS THE RENT control debate ap- proaches peak intensity, a new con- troversy has emerged concerning Ann Arbor's median rent relative to the na- tion. HRP, in Its campaign literature sup- porting the Rent Control Amendment, has produced a figure placing the me- dian rental level in the Ann Arbor metro- politan area second only to that of Stam- ford, Connecticut. Meanwhile, Mayor Stephenson's Blue Ribbon Citizens Commission on Rent Control has refuted the HRP ranking. The Commission claims that city rent levels are not second in the nation but indeed only 17th in the state of Michi- gan. The discrepancy here merits comment. In arriving at their "second, nation-wide" figure, HRP was comparing Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas as delim- ited by the U. S. Census Bureau. Ann Ar- bor's SMSA constitutes Ann Arbor and the remainder of Washtenaw County. HE BLUE RIBBON COMMITTEE, on the other hand, took into account only the city, and compared its rent levels with other cities and towns. The Commission, in attempting to discredit HRP's use of SMSA's at a ranking basis, claims that many SMSA's, unlike Ann Ar- bor, include large areas of low-rent sub- standard housing (such as the Detroit metropolitan areas) which tend to pull down the higher rent rates of outlying a.reas. While HRP may have walked on shakey ground in' depicting all of Washtenaw County as the Ann Arbor metropolitan, area, its "second highest" figure never- TODAY'S STAFF: News: Dan Biddle, Stephen Hersh, Claudia Lewin, Mary Long, Judy Rus- kin, Stephen Selbst, Jeff Soernsen Editorial Page: Brian Colgan, Paul Hask- ins, Marnie Heyn Arts Page: Ken Fink Photo Technician: Allison Rutton theless more accurately represents the real-rent situation in Ann Arbor. The SMSA standard may not take into account slum areas in other metropoli- tan areas, but neither does the Commis- sion's reasoning account for Ann Ar- bor's substantial tracts of sub-standard, poorly constructed, and shabbily main- tained residential areas which resemble slums in every way except their exhorbi- tant rent rates. (N ADDITION, IT would be unrealistic to establish the city limits as the physical parameters of the Ann Arbor rent dilemma. In the past few years, a greater number of students and other renters have been forced to find hous- ing farther and farther away from the city center, many beyond the city limits. Even so, these renters do not find their inconvenient locations compensated by more reasonable rent rates. The median rent rates in Ann Arbor's outlying areas is little less than within the city. That is, things are tough all over. Included among the sixteen cities which Mayor Stephenson's rent control commission have mentioned as having higher median rent rates than Ann Ar- bor are Southfield, Birmingham, and Beverly Hills, residential bedroom com- munities which are heardly comparable vto. Ann Arbor' In terms of median income or cost of living. By G. PITTMAN and M. MITCHELL SINCE ITS BIRTH, the rent control pro- posal has been the focus of an emo- tionally charged struggle between its ad- vocates and adversaries. Due to the re- sulting conflicting reports of the essence and effects of rent control, members of PIRGIM have carefully studied the pro- posed Charter Amendment. What resulted is an evaluation of the Amendment itself and speculation of its effectiveness in dealing with housing short- ages, high rent and a manipulated market, the housing problems of Ann Arbor. The language of the amendment is de- tailed and exact. It leaves very few am- biguities concerning its intent. The pro- posal contains a well-defined process for establishing .a nine-member Board to set maximum allowable rents, a well-defined formula for determining those rents, re- quirements for registrationby landlords of rental units affected by this proposal, and a source of revenue for the Board's opera- tion by way of registration fees. The fees would be $15 per unit, payable by the land- lord, and $5 per rental adjustment re- quest, payable by the person making the request. THE BOARD is given the power to ap- point a staff, including an attorney. It also has the power to make studies, conduct hearings, collect information in the form of witnesses, documents, files, books and paners. Provision is made for appeal of an? of the Board's decisions once per year per person. In short, the mechanisms and power for rl' nroposal's effectuation, is passed, exist explicity in it's content. Provided in the formula establishing the maximum monthly rent is: 100 per cent of the landlord's reasonable operating expenses, n 4 . : . . ...%. vm.:....w::"{.......... ..a.. .. .m... .". .. .,.ty..s ^. "If passed, the rent control proposal could probably be effec- tive as a stop-gap measure to lower rents and somewhat change the manipulativeness of the housing market." p..}:r,.,.}r. e.t r}""rR"};"fi:":r. svtrJ.}}:fi:?} f." r. :..s S ;...:t. g+.. 100 per cent of the landlord's property tax expenditures, 100 per cent of the landlord's principle and interest mortgage payments (the interest can be no greater than 8 per cent), 110 per cent of reasonable capital im- provements costs (dishwasher, structural improvements), and 150 per cent of reasonable maintenance costs. HOWEVER, EXPENSES in the formula are based on the previous year's cost and no provision is made in the formula, for an inflation factor. Landlords have the bulk of financial re- sponsibility for the Board through registra- tion fees that are not deductable as oper- ating expenses. Tenants have no monetary IF, BY THIS formula, the profit ex- ceeds 14 per cent of the landlord's equity (that portion of the house that the land- lord actually owns opposed to what tie bank owns), then the rent is reduced to a level which will yield to the landlord a 14 per cent profit. It seems, by this formula, that in order to make a profit the landlord would have to put a substantial amount into maintain- ance and capital improvements, the only items which have more than 100 per cent returned to the landlord through the rent. Of course, the landlord still receives long- term gains of appreciating property value, numerous tax benefits for owning .'eal es- tate, as well as an increased equity through regular mortgage payments. Landlords, then, are assured of a rea- sonable profit by the formula, though land- lords that are now making unreasonable profits according to the formula, would be forced to lower rents. The formula also encourages landlords to make expenditures for maintainance and capital improve- input into its revenues. This could con- ceivably cripple the Board's functions se- verely if the landlords delayed or simply refused payment of required fees, in direct violation of the amendment. However, for any unit not registered, the rent is $0, noth- ing. Since registration fees are straight ra- ther than proportional charges, and not deductable in part or whole as operating expenses, they will pose an unequal burden on the lower cost units (a $50 room versus a $250 apartment). Tenants will see an immediate reduction of rents to the 1972/1973 levels until there is a further adjustment by the Board pro- viding the landlord with only a reasonable profit. If the tenant thinks this rent unrea- sonable, a request for rent adjustment to be based on the landlord's actual expenses can be made to the Board. THE TENANT as well as the general pub- lic will have access to a basic summary of the landlord's expense figures. Homeowners may think that assessed val- ue on rental property will decrease with reduction in rents, thereby causing home- owners' burden of property taxes to be proportionately greater in order to main- tain the present level of city revenues, How- ever, since the landlord's permissable 14 per cent profit is based on the assessed value, the landlord will desire higher as- sessment to increase the 'allowable dollar amount of profits. The landlord will will- ingly pay the increased taxes (taxes being based on assessment value) because pro- perty taxes are fully recoverable under the r- fa r-mla, as well as through income tax deductions. The private homeowner's proportion of taxes will therefore pro- bably not become greater, but could rea- sonably be expected to lower. Time could conceivably become a limit- ing factor to the Board's effectiveness,' since the requirements of the Amendment could easily cause it to be deluged in the first month of it's existence with more paperwork and organizational structuring than its infant staff could efficiently deal with. IF PASSED, the rent control proposal could probably be effective as a stop-gap measure to lower rents and somewhat change the manipulativeness of the hous- ing market. But the basic problems of a non-competitive market and housing short- ages (due to student tenants overflowing University housing into community housing) would still exist. The rent control mea- sure could be a timely, convenient tool to deal with these problems if it were ac- companied by efforts to increase the num- ber of rental units available. So far, such efforts have been either non-existent or very quiet. Mark Mitchell and. Glenda Pittman are PIRGIM researchers. lettersletters lettersletters lettersleti FINALLY, THE cost of living in Ann Ar- bor, traditionally one of the nation's highest, has skyrocketed since the 1970 census, from which both the HRP's and the Commission's rankings were taken. Rental rates have reflected this increase. Neither HRP's SMSA ranking system nor the Blue Ribbon Commission's city vs. city scale could accurately reflect all the complexities of the Ann Arbor rent situation. However, if we are not to ig- nore the rent dilemma as it exists in them entirety of metropolitan Ann Arbor, the HRP's "second highest" label seems more applicable, lest we try to compare Ann Arbor with the Beverly Hills of the na- tion. McGee To The Daily: -PAUL HASKINS America: Land of Ajax By BETH NISSEN THE OUTSIDE looks like a surgically amputated ranch house with choked malnourished bushes overgrowing the front window. The interior decor is Early Ghetto. A fractured couch rests precariously on four rocky cinder blocks, and an upholstered chair leaks stuffing onto the thin, stained carpet. Milk curdles in tumblers that are care- fully tilted between the cushions on the couch. In the kitchen, stacks of fortnight- old dishes crust together and healthy colon- ies of mold grow on the backboard of the sink. In the bathroom, a stiffened towel ies along the floorboard. Toothpaste and shav- ing cream,are cemented in blue and white growths on the sink and fleck the mirror. :l :r : } S!". " f} }:". u;i 7:: .5 .' i . rt Thoughout the house, scraps of crumpled paper and bits of trash litter the floor. What makes this house a high rent slum is not so much the evil intentions of a mustachioed and slimy landlord (although an unexpected rent increase was forced on the unsuspecting tenants) as the living habits of the inhabitants. FROM ALL outward appearances, t h e four tenants are average collegians. They wear the trademark jeans, flannel shirts and work boots. Cooking in aboriginal jungle conditions doesn't seem to have given any of them terminal trench mouth. Eating amongst trash hasn't turned their brains into Ger- ber baby food and showering in garbage hasn't gotten any of them a condemned no- tice fr~m the Board of Health or lost them more friends than their personalities would .nave lost them anyway There are those in this world who fold their underwear and those who throw it into a draver. There are those who make their beds every morning and smooth a bedspread on, and those who leave the bed flaking underwear for three months before picking it up. There are those who plug in the Electrolux every Saturday and those wha only clean in May so they can get their damage deposit back. IT ISN'T EASY to judge which is the better life - a Suzy-clean-spic-and-span-de- odorized-sparkle life in a world that looks and smells like a prepared Petrie dish, or the undusted, scummy-foul hobo life digni- fied by a flushing toilet and running water. The former life has been given much more favorable publicity. You never see Chief Ironside run his wheels over yesterday's suit and tie, or Mary Tyler Moore in a messy apartment. The only mess televised is Oscar's room on The Odd Couple. The only person who ever does dishes in T.V. Land is the lady on the Dove commercial and she doesn't do them to get Freddy's peanut butter off the plates, but because it makes her hands so soft. Mr. Clean advertising has done many of us irreparable harm. Many of us who lived in a "pick that up" atmosphere as child- ren cannot bear a room- that doesn't look like a picture from House Beautiful. Sigmund Freud never analyzed the com- pulsion that causes misery and grief for thousands, the P.F.E., E.I.P. Syndrome (Place for Everything,, Everything in Place). It is what causes many to pick up and shelve things they're going to use in ten minutes just because it's neater. It causes masses to Aerowax their floors into icy deathtraps and Lemon Pledge lay- ers off their walnut coffeetables. YET THOSE who live in houses littered with collected debris don't lose a minute's sleep with guilt over the week's build- up of dust on the dresser. Perhaps if the nation let the dirt collect under their sofas, the dishes soak in the codwra n extra d,. v m e airn.in- han A GREAT DEAL of misinforma- tion and confusion has been creat-a ed by the Daily's report of the ac- tion taken by the Democratic Par- ty on the proposed rent control charter amendment. Democrats present at their meeting of Feb- ruary 28 voted to re-affirm t h e position stated in their party plat- form - that each candidate should publicly and clearly state her or his position on the amendment pro- posal. I have publicly and clearly stat- ed my position in leaflets which are being delivered door-to-door, in discussions with individual voters and in debates before l a r g e groups. I would like to take this opportunity to state my positon to the Daily. It is clear that there is a short- age of low and moderate cost hous- ing in Ann Arbor. The victims of this shortage are the large and captive student and central city populations. They are subje.;ted to rent gouging and forced to accept low quality housing by unscrup ulous rental corporations. As a short-term and stop-gap measure to protect tenants from these shod- dy practices, I support the r e n t control amendment and will vote for it on April 1st. HOWEVER, we should all real- ize that the rent control amend- ment by itself will not solve all of Ann Arbor's housing problems. This fact is highlighted by the re- cently released report of the city's Rent Control Commission, which concluded that the enactment of a city-wide rent control program would not alone solve the under- lying problems of Ann Arbor's len- tal housing crunch. In fact, this proposal discourages the building of new low and moderate cost housing, thereby leaving poor and non-mobile tenants in a worse posi- tion than they were originally. Be- cause of this and other potential dangers I agree with the editors of the Ann Arbor Sun that the city charter is not the best place to put the rent control law. The process of correcting or altering a provi- sion encased in the city ,hatter is long, laborious and difficult to in- itiate. I would prefer (and if the charter amendment should fail, I would sponsor) a rent control ord- - inance which could be passed and corrected by a progressive major- ity on city council. BUT EVEN with a rent control ordinance, the final solution to the the enactment of other, long range rental problem really depends on programs. To truly alleviate the city'shousing situation, I wi also support and work for the fo'lowing measures: 1) Urge the city to take advant- age of federal and state grants for the construction of quality low-cost housing units in the city. 2) Enactment of an innovative land use development plan and zoning code for the central city. 3) Expansion of the city's mass transit system to enable people who must work or study in the central area, but are unable or unwilling is presently being allowed by City Hall. 6) Encourage the passage of state enabling legislation allowing collective bargaining by tenants. OVER THE past five yeis,. from the passage of the Tenants Rights Legislation to impdementation of the Concentrated Code Enforce- ment program, the Democratic Party has done more to protect the rights and interests of tenants in Ann Arbor than any of the city's other political parties. As a me- ber of city council, I will contin- ue this tradition by proposing legis- lation which will give effective protection to the tenant while deal- ing with the realities of the rental situation in Ann Arbor. -Colleen S. McGee Democratic Council Candidate First Ward March 12, 1974 To The Daily: UNTIL ABOUT two days ago, I was undecided whether to vote for the Democratic or the HRP candi- date in the 1st Ward. Then Coleen McGee came to my door to talk about the election. I was very disappointed by her tactics. She told me that I shouldnt vote for HRP in the 1st Ward became it would split the vote. But that doesn't seem to make sense to me in this ward where Republicans don't seem to be in the rnning. It made me think that the numler one objective of the Democrats as not to help their constituenTs, but to eliminate the HRP once and for all. I just can't agree with that goal or those tactics. Having followed Council and city politics for the past few years, I've become aware that when the Dem- ocrats refused to move on rent control, HRP got it on the ballot. But I still wasn't convinced to mte for HRP. I also knew that H2P had proposed proportional repre- sentation to avoid minorrty n trol of City Council by the Rpub licans. I thought that the Demo- crats must have had some good reason to reject this plan. BUT AFTER talking to Cleen, I've come to believe that the rea- son they opposed it is that they are not really interested -n unit- ing the progressive vote, but they are first and foremost interested in getting rid of HRP by whatever means necessary. They m id me think what proposals might have come up on City Council and the city ballot over the past rwn years if HRP wasn't around. I doubt that the Democrats would have dne much of importance without llRP's prodding. If Coleen McGee wanrs to win votes, I would suggest that as a first step she and the emorats stop using these dishbnest scare tactics. -Jim Oakley March 17 To The Daily: I HAVE SERVED on the Hu- man Rights Commission with Col- leen McGee since last April, and Commission and that I do not sup- port Ms. McGee's candidacy. McGee's position on rent control is quite clear to me: She has stat- ed to me and the media repeated-- ly that, although she has strong re- servations about the HRP rent con- trol charter amendment, she will vote for it. I have never heard her- tell anyone otherwise. Her problem seems to be that she has been too honest. She has expressed serious reservations about the charter amendmert. It would have been a lot better polit- ically for her to have hidden her reservations and to have come out four-square for it. NOW SHE finds herself atacKd for allegedlystating to Glen Har- ris of the Ann Arbor News that she is opposed to the amendmem., While I have known Mr. Harris for a couple of years, and be is a good journalist, nonetheless he could have overlooked McGee's statement of support for the amend- ment. Even the best newspaper- people occasionally slip up. I would much rather believe this than that McGee is lying. I frark- ly doubt that she is capable of it Perhaps the lesson in all this is that candidates should only speak in simplicities. -David Cahill Law '74 March 21 GEO To The Daily: THE RECENT report by the Daily on the GEO Union electon contained some inaccuracies. On April 1, 2, and 3, all Graduate Student Teaching Assistants, Re- search Assistants and Staff Assist- ants'will have the chance to vote on whether they want GEO to be- come a legal bargaining agen for the purposes of collective bargain- ing with the University. If a ma- jority of those voting in that elec- tion vote "yes" GEO will then have status as a Union in the state of Michigan. The election was caled because over the required num- ber 30 per cent of the bargaining unit (TA's, RA's, SA's) signed cards requesting that GEO become a legal bargaining agent. In the election itself there is no minimum number of voters re- quired for the election to be valid. GEO is hoping for a huge turn- out, however, since the more unit- ed graduate employees are, the better chance we have of winning a fair contract from the University once we are certified. The elec- tion is being held under the aus- pices of the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) who will supervise the voting and certify the results. The polling place in the Rackham Lobby will be open from 9:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m. for each of the three days of voting. -Executive Committee Graduate Employees Organization March 19, 1974 Richman To The Daily: side statement is simply not true) I have always been appalled at the rents and other landlord abuses in Ann Arbor, and we've got to try to do something about them. However, it would be irresponsi- ble and intellectually dishonest ,f I ignored the very real flaws in. the ballot proposal. If HRP wishes to contend that my reservations are the products of political exped- iency, they fail to realize that such expediency would have dictated an opposite tactic. It would have been paltically much, much safer for me to have signed and supported the ballot proposals with no criticism or qual- ifications as to their ieal and prac- tical effects. I could not in gnod conscience do that. FOR THE RECORD, then, I 'd like to run down exacty what problems I see in tne rent con- trol proposal. If it's :n the charter, it can't be modified in any way without the whole pe-itio - and - voter-approval pro edure ne- cessary to put it in tne Charter in the first place; there will b no flexibility to deal with practical difficulties that may well arise In other words, if it tioesn't work right, we're stucx. Second. the limitation of interet that can be passed on to 8 per cent is sim- plynot a reflection of "reason- able" costs when no one can ge: an 8 per' cent mortgage Most i- portantly, however, I fear that the proposal lends itself to abuses which will be practially impos- sible to control. h For example, the provi iwi al- lowing landlords to pass on ISO per cent of reasonable maintenance costs is a good idea, but will >i- most certainly result in inefficient maintenance, "padding" -- if not fabrication - of maintenance bil, etc. - with the tenants paying, of course. The drafters were clearly aware of this possibility, as they sprovided sensible guidelines by which the Rent Control Board is .o determine the "reasyiableness" of maintenance expendi ores. SO FAR, so good. The real nrob- lem arises when it comes time to implement t h a t provision. There are nine people on the Rent Con- trol Board and close to twenty thousand apartments in this ity. To police effectively the reason- ableness of landlord's claimed e- penditures, members of the Board will not only have to consider the factors mentioned in the guidelines, but they'll probably have to go out and look at every apartment. (Nine Board members, 20,000 apartments.) I don't think it's out of line for me to suggest that t will be close to physically impossih'e for the Board to perform its duties in n:uch better than a perfunctory nannr. Simply put, I'm afraid tha lad- lords will take advanage of the loopholes in the proposal and that the Board will be too bogged down to be able to do all it should about it. I may be wrong in my fears. I hope so. I would be mon- than happy to see rent cone-ol enacted an tn d a tsit.work n ,t dap'th-* nowledge where the probem' exist. BUT I URGE people to vote for it notwithstanding those problems. Remember that if it's defeated, the cause of any kind of rent control in Ann Arbor will be se- verely set back. Landlords and Re- publicans would interpret a v o t e against the HRP proposal as a vote against the principle of rent con- trol; then, if anyone tried to intro- duce any other kind of rent con- trol measure, Republicans would counter (in righteous tones) t h a t The People didn't want it. We can not let this happen. We can't give landlords a green light - in the guise of the Popular Will - to con- tinue their intolerable practices. As far as the Democratic Party as a whole is concerned, I would have liked to see it express sup- port for the HRP proposal. How- ever, Democrats were divided on the issue and most felt it would be unfair for either side to attempt to speak for, or impose its will on, the other. Unlike HRP, the Demo- cratic Party is broa-based, not monolithic. It does not prport to dictate to its members what they may say, vote, or think. -Mary Richman March 23 impeach To The Daily: ON APRIL 27 there will be de- monstrations in Washington, Chi- cago, and San Francisco to de- mand the ousting of Richard Nix- on. A week later, on May 4, Gerald Ford is coming to Ann Arbor to address Commencement. On March 27 at 7:30 p.m. in Greene Lounge, East Quad, there will be a mass meeting of the Dump Nixon Coali- tion to organize around both these events. Richard Nixon's crimes are ob- vious, and we cannot depend cn . the interminable maneuvers of the White House and Congressional lawyers to remove him. Only the active participation of the people can insure his speedy departure. And we must further make known to Gerald Ford and his ilk our refusal to accept the same policies out of different mouths, policies responsible for the suffering of mil- lions of people at home and abroad. Although the problems we face will not end with a change of per- sonnel in the White House, for the people not to respond to the begin- nings of facism in government would be a serious mistake. WE URGE everyone who wold like to see Nixon out to come on Wednesday night, so that we an begin the business of getting our- selves together for Washington and May 4th. Much work needs to be, done; a little effort on everyone's part will insure successful demon- strations, which are certain to counteract the barrage of pro- Nixon propaganda -rrm the Mhite House. -The Attica Brigade March 26 I tm~m., *t This. nfail., . . a