The tenant roundtable focused on hidden fees, habitability and rent-setting algorithms accused of driving up the cost of housing

In a roundtable Friday with Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser pledged to work closely with federal investigators to crack down on “abusive and predatory practices” by corporate landlords — a sign that housing may soon become a larger focus for the state’s top enforcer of consumer protection laws.

“We need to get the word out,” Weiser said. “The goal is, if landlords know there will be consequences for them failing to follow the law, they’re going to be more motivated to follow the law.”

Khan and Weiser met with renters and legal advocates at the Community Economic Defense Project at their North Capitol Hill office in Denver, where tenants shared stories of rising rental fees, deteriorating living conditions and feelings of helplessness when they had nowhere to turn for assistance.

“A big pain point that we’ve been hearing about for some time now is potentially abusive practices in the housing market, especially for renters,” Khan said at the event.

In her remarks, Khan focused on two areas as top concerns for the FTC: hidden fees and computer algorithms that landlords now use to screen tenants and set the price of rent.

  • SoylentBlake
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    2 months ago

    Relaxing the rules on corporate ownership of housing is how we got out of the 2008 crash. Banks, private equity, investors were all skittish about spending - which is how you turn a “recession” (for the moneyed) into a “depression” (which it was and it’s never fully recovered from still to this day for the regular folk).

    I didn’t agree with it then, and I don’t agree with it now. Corporations are little consumption factories that consume until ecosystem collapse, everywhere we allow corporations a foothold in the market is an inevitable impending crash. I mean, just look around; everything is in crisis - always.

    The largest lobbying group on the hill isn’t from the oil barons or arms traffickers, I mean the defense industry, it’s from realtors. An unnecessary job that shouldn’t even exist, which extracts wealth from the population well above its rank. It’s one of the most obvious, unregulated grifts to have ever grifted.

    If AI is going to take all the “easy” jobs first, I expect CEO’s (it CAN’T be hard, Musk can part-time it for like 5 companies), bankers and realtors should all be next on the chopping block, and good fucking riddance for all of them when they do.