California Law Shortens Time to Respond to Eviction Notices, Raising Concerns for Tenants

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California Law Shortens Time to Respond to Eviction Notices, Raising Concerns for Tenants
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A new California law reduces the time tenants have to respond to eviction notices from 10 days to 5 days, potentially making it harder for them to seek legal assistance and defend themselves. While supporters argue this will expedite the eviction process, critics warn it could disproportionately impact tenants in rural areas with limited access to legal resources.

María Vela assembles a cardboard box as her family gets ready to move out of their home of nearly 30 years in East Los Angeles on Dec. 17, 2023. tenants have to respond after receiving an eviction notice from five business days to ten. Law yers who work with renters say that what may seem like a minor procedural change could make a big difference in allowing people to stay in their homes.

“Five days has never been enough for a tenant to find legal assistance and try to decipher the complaint filed against them, find out what kind of defenses they have, fill out the paperwork and make it to court,” Lorraine López, a senior attorney with the Western Center on Law and Poverty, told CalMatters earlier this fall..

The change convinced the state’s largest landlord lobby, the California Apartment Association, to remain neutral on the law while legislators debated it. Some local property owner groups still opposed the law. “The longer these things take, the more expensive it is and the more rent is lost,” said Daniel Bornstein, an attorney who represents property owners.17-year-old killed in stabbing identified as Azusa High School student and a talented artistNYPD arrests man suspected of lighting homeless woman on fire in Brooklyn subway car, killing herGabriel Fernandez, 8, was tortured to death. His mother didn’t like her life sentence. This is what a judge had to say.

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