A myriad of new laws was imposed during the pandemic. In addition to “temporary” moratoriums, new permanent laws were enacted at every level–state, city, county, and federal. Failure to comply with these rules could result in a dismissal in court and starting the entire eviction process over. For nonpayment of rent, residential landlords must offer a repayment plan and go through an Eviction Resolution Pilot Program. This is not just a moratorium or bridge proclamation requirement. Residential landlords can no longer serve a 20-day notice without cause. This is a new, permanent, state-wide law. Cause for eviction under state law includes […]
just cause eviction
Kent landlord-tenant law had required landlords to serve a “Warning of Intent to TerminateTenancy” before issuing a 20-day notice to terminate tenancy. As state law now requires longer notice periods and has all but eliminated the “20-day” notice, the Kent law became both unnecessary and ineffective (because it conflicts with state law). The City of Kent therefore repealed the law that had required a “Warning of Intent to TerminateTenancy” notice. Landlords must comply with new state laws that require just cause to evict, and in most situations do not allow a notice that terminates tenancy in only 20 days.
Yesterday Governor Inslee signed a bill that establishes a just cause eviction law throughout Washington state. The Washington just cause eviction law is largely similar to just cause eviction laws in Seattle, Federal Way, and Burien. Washington residential landlords may no longer serve a “20-day” no-cause notice to terminate a tenancy. There is an exception when the landlord shares housing with the tenant. Landlords may terminate a tenancy and the end of the initial lease term with 60 days’ notice. To evict because the landlord wishes to sell or if the landlord or an immediate family member intends to live […]
A bill (HB 1236) that establishes just-cause eviction statewide for residential tenancies has passed the legislature and is on the governor’s desk. If, as is widely expected, the governor signs the bill into law it will be another among many sweeping changes to landlord-tenant and eviction law. Under the proposed law landlords would be able to end a tenancy without cause at the end of the initial lease period with 60 days’ notice. Landlords who share their dwelling unit with the tenant could issue the traditional twenty-day notice. In other circumstances, landlords would need just cause. Failure to cure a […]
A new bill in Olympia would impose a state-wide just cause eviction law for residential rentals.[1] Landlords would not be allowed to terminate a tenancy or evict a tenant except for certain enumerated grounds. These would include failure to pay rent, material breach of the rental contract terms, creating waste or nuisance, the owner seeking to sell, the owner seeking to live in the property, and various other specified grounds. The law would require landlords to offer payment plans for tenants with rental debt due to COVID-19 hardship. The payment plan must be “based on the tenant’s finances” and other […]
Seattle has had a just cause eviction ordinance for years. A recent proposal would impose a state-wide just cause eviction law for all residential tenancies in Washington.[1] The new law would make it impossible for Washington landlords to evict residential tenants—including month-to-month tenants—except for one of a few enumerated causes. The proposed just cause eviction law would extend the cure periods for non-payment of rent and other breaches of the tenancy terms to fourteen days. Current law allows the landlord to serve a 3-day notice for non-payment of rent, and a 10-day notice for any other breach of the tenancy […]