GlobeSt.: The Eviction Moratorium's End May Not Lead to a Jump in Homelessness
By Erik Sherman
Many landlords, frustrated with the extension to the CDC pandemic eviction moratorium, are likely counting the days to its end on July 31.
By Erik Sherman
Many landlords, frustrated with the extension to the CDC pandemic eviction moratorium, are likely counting the days to its end on July 31.
By Carla Marinucci and Richard Tzul
THE BUZZ: It was California gorgeous.
Which is why the Memorial Day holiday weekend spelled out, in all its glory, the challenge ahead for the California Republican Party and its gubernatorial hopefuls.
By Clare Busch
A UCLA-USC survey revealed nearly half of Los Angeles County tenants owe back rent. That amounts to upwards of $3 billion in back rent.
The survey found the median amount renters owe their landlords is $2,800.
By Debra Kamin
Some residents have left the state, but many others have just moved out of big cities in search of more space and lower prices, creating hot spots in the suburbs and the once-sleepy exurbs.
By Debra Kamin
Some residents have left the state, but many others have just moved out of big cities in search of more space and lower prices, creating hot spots in the suburbs and the once-sleepy exurbs.
By Greg Cornfield
Rents in Southern California are quickly adjusting to the pandemic-driven shifts from densely populated regions to the surrounding suburbs over the past 18 months.
By Jeff Collins
If the past year is any indication, apartment rents will continue dropping in central and coastal portions of Los Angeles County through the next year, with rent hikes occurring everywhere else in the Southern California, a University of Southern California multifamily forecast said Monday.
For example, the Koreatown-Mid City portions of L.A. will see rent decline 1.2% over the next year, while west Riverside and San Bernardino counties will see rent hikes of 9-10%.
By Dennis Lynch
A growing number of renters will descend on the Los Angeles suburbs in the year ahead, a trend that will fuel more price hikes amid shrinking inventory.
By Jeff Collins
If the past year is any indication, apartment rents will continue dropping in central and coastal portions of Los Angeles County through the next year, with rent hikes occurring everywhere else in the Southern California, a University of Southern California multifamily forecast said Monday.
For example, the Koreatown-Mid City portions of L.A. will see rent decline 1.2% over the next year, while west Riverside and San Bernardino counties will see rent hikes of 9-10%.