BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                  AB 2712
                                                                  Page  1

          CONCURRENCE IN SENATE AMENDMENTS
          AB 2712 (Leno)
          As Amended August 24, 2006
          Majority vote
           
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          |ASSEMBLY:  |     |(May 4, 2006)   |SENATE: |24-9 |(August 28,    |
          |           |     |                |        |     |2006)          |
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               (vote not relevant)

          Original Committee Reference:    TRANS  .

           SUMMARY  :  Clarifies existing law regarding the duty of a  
          residential landlord regarding the tenancy of individuals who  
          are required to register as sex offenders.  Specifically,  this  
          bill  :  

          1)Provides that no duty toward tenants shall arise on the part  
            of a residential landlord solely for renting or leasing  
            residential real property to a person who is registered or who  
            is required to register under Section 290 of the Penal Code  
            (Megan's Law) or who is a person who has been convicted as a  
            sex offender in another state or foreign jurisdiction.

          2)Makes conforming changes to related Penal Code provisions to  
            clarify that that a landlord's authorization to use Megan's  
            Law registration information is discretionary, and does not  
            create a duty to use the information.

          3)Makes related findings and declarations.

          4)Provides for double-jointing with AB 1849 and SB 1128.

           The Senate amendments  delete the Assembly version of this bill,  
          and insert instead the foregoing provisions.

           AS PASSED BY THE ASSEMBLY  , this bill dealt with bar pilots.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :   None

           COMMENTS  :   This bill is co-sponsored by the California Housing  
          Council (CHC) to clarify the landlord's duties and obligations  
          under Megan's Law.  Specifically, the bill would provide that  
          current law does not impose a duty on landlords to use  








                                                                  AB 2712
                                                                  Page  2

          information available on the Megan's Law website to make  
          decisions about housing accommodations; that delivery to the  
          tenants of notice of the Megan's Law website is the only  
          information the landlord is required to provide regarding the  
          proximity of a registered sex offender; and that no duty is  
          created solely because a landlord rents or continues to rent to  
          a person convicted of a sex offense.  

          As CHC points out, AB 2712 would not absolve landlords of  
          obligations that may exist under other laws or to maintain their  
          premises.  

          The Western Center on Law and Poverty writes, "[This] bill would  
          clarify that a landlord has no special duty with regard to  
          renting property to a tenant who is required to register on the  
          Megan's Law database.  It also clarifies that the general duty  
          required of landlords to provide safe housing remain in place;  
          thus a landlord can evict and make other housing decisions based  
          on conduct, rather than status.  These clarifications will help  
          to ensure that there will not be a further concentration of  
          offenders in lower-rent apartments and single-room occupancy  
          hotels, which would put poor, latch-key children at a greater  
          risk than better-off children.  We understand that higher income  
          tenants with easy access to the Megan's Law database already  
          demand that their landlords refuse to rent or evict offenders.  
          Unfortunately, this is a zero-sum game: the offender has to live  
          somewhere.  Where are they likely to go?  To lower-rent housing,  
          where the tenants lack the equipment and time to check whether  
          the new tenant is registered.  By clarifying a landlord's  
          duties, [this] bill would inhibit the wholesale shifting of  
          offenders to poor neighborhoods.  [This] bill reaches a delicate  
          balance in this very difficult and vexing situation."
           

          Analysis Prepared by  :    Kevin G. Baker / JUD. / (916) 319-2334 


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