|
Note: This log is organized by date, newest to
oldest.
April 4, 2005 - Waukegan amends (05-O-39) the licensing and inspection
ordinance to require annual inspections of single-family rental homes.
July 7, 2003 - Waukegan city council adopts the revised
licensing and inspection ordinance, over the objections of two aldermen.
"I'm so disappointed with the way apartment owners are
carrying themselves on this," said ald. Sam Cunningham. Cunningham
added that he will monitor the revised program for effectiveness.
[read the News Sun article]
June 27, 2003 - LCAOA receives the "final"
draft markup of the revised ordinance. Key items:
- Owner-occupied 2-unit properties are still exempt from
inspection.
- Inspections will be conducted every three years, or 1/3
annually if owner prefers.
- License fees are:
- $10.00 for 1-2 units
- $10.00 per unit for 3-10 units
- $100.00 per building if over 10 units
- $200.00 for total complex of multi-family buildings
(same owner)
- Inspection fees are $10.00 per unit.
- The inspection checklist is now contained within the
ordinance
- Vacant units are not required to be reinspected before
renting
- Before seeking an administrative search warrant, the city
will present the matter for review by a newly-created task force.
"The Task Force's objective will be to establish guidelines and make recommendations
to the City concerning disputes relating to the rental property inspection
process."
To download the draft ordinance in Adobe pdf format (583k), click
here.
According to LCAOA's legal counsel, constitutional concerns
have not been eliminated with this draft. One of the most important issues
will be whether the city continues to successfully seek administrative search
warrants without providing the necessary probable cause defined in the U.S.
Constitution and interpreted by several federal courts.
The Waukegan city council is expected to approve this
ordinance at the July 7, 2003 regular meeting.
June 16, 2003 - Waukegan ordinance revisions near
completion.
According to an article
in the News Sun, Alderman Patrick Needham introduced a revised licensing
and inspection ordinance to the City Council and scheduled a vote for the
July council meeting.
April
8, 2003
- Waukegan
mayor forms committee to review inspections
Waukegan mayor Richard Hyde has formed a committee to review the current
inspection ordinance and recommend changes to improve the process.
The committee includes aldermen Patrick Needham and Tony Figureroa,
landlords and LCAOA members Phil Lorenc and Fred Gust, Fair Housing
director Pat Konicki and several Waukegan tenants. More committee members
may be named at a later date.
Enforcement of the inspection ordinance was suspended before February's
primary elections, and has not been reactivated as of this date. Mayor
Hyde has promised that inspections will not resume until the inspection
process is reviewed and amended.
Meanwhile, LCAOA, in cooperation with the Mexican American Legal Defense
and Education Fund (MALDEF), has prepared a federal lawsuit that attacks
several aspects of the inspection ordinance as unconstitutional. As a
courtesy, Waukegan officials have been given one final chance to repeal
the existing ordinance -- or the lawsuit will be filed.
The Illinois Association of Realtors is also participating in the lawsuit.
March 28, 2003 - LCAOA attorneys mail a final
notice to Waukegan attorneys. Once again, the letter outlines
the constitutional violations entailed in the inspection ordinance, and
asks that the ordinance be repealed by May 5, 2003. If the city does
not respond favorably, LCAOA is prepared to file suit in Federal court.
March 10, 2003 - Waukegan begins mailing notices
to landlords informing them that "as of March 7, 2003 the rental
license inspection program will cease until further notice. Mayor
Hyde has appointed a committee to refine the methods of inspections, which
may result in changes to the program."
March 8, 2003 - Waukegan schedules a meeting for clergy members
for Monday, March 10. The purpose of the meeting is to explain the
inspection ordinance from the city's perspective (see In
the News).
March 7, 2003 - An LCAOA member reports that an upcoming
inspection scheduled for next week has been postponed indefinitely.
Waukegan building department continues to state publicly that any
inspections scheduled for March have not been suspended.
February 18, 2003 - The Waukegan City Council amends the
inspection ordinance to exempt new construction for the first year of
service. The rationale is that new construction is already being
inspected before occupancy permits are issued, so licensing inspections
are redundant.
The ordinance is also amended to recognize properties that pass the
first inspection. Under the new rules, properties that pass the
first inspection will be inspected every-other year rather than every
year.
During comment time, Alderman Patrick Needham (7th) mentions that he
has heard from several landlords, and now feels that the inspection
ordinance should be revisited with additional input from landlords and
tenants.
Needham's comments draw the ire of Alderman Lawrence V. TenPas (6th)
and Sam Cunningham (1st); both rant about absentee landlords who feast
off their properties. Cunningham blames landlords for not policing
each other and accuses them of not caring about life/safety issues.
Several aldermen decry "misinformation" and "lies" put
out by area landlords to scare tenants.
In fact, in our first meeting with the City on February 28, 2002, task
force members suggested that the city expand the fire department's
existing life/safety inspection program to all rental housing.
Currently, the fire department only inspects larger apartment
buildings. At that time, our suggestion was rejected. The city
insisted that inspections include zoning and maintenance issues.
The city is now pointing to life/safety problems discovered during the
licensing inspections, and accusing area landlords of fighting life/safety
inspections. We are not fighting life/safety inspections;
this was reaffirmed on February 6, 2003 (see post for that day).
Mayor Hyde announces that administrative warrants will be served on
[805 Baldwin] tomorrow, and then "that's going to be it until we take
another look at this ordinance."
February 14, 2003 - Mayor Hyde confirms that the inspections
have been stopped as of Tuesday. No more inspections until the
process is revisited. Hyde implies that inspectors have found many
violations at some buildings; some inspection results are "unbelievable."
Property owners who have already received notice of inspections begin
receiving phone calls from city code enforcers. The scheduled
inspections have been "postponed" due to "scheduling
problems."
February 11, 2003 - Mayor suspends inspections
At a Tuesday evening Candidates Forum, Mayor Dick Hyde announces the
temporary suspension of rental inspections. He indicates that there
are some problems with the process that need to be addressed before
inspections resume.
February 11, 2003 - A number of LCAOA members agree to support
Susan J. Bailey's aldermanic candidacy for Waukegan's second ward, in
opposition to incumbent John Balen. Volunteers will install campaign
signs, telephone registered voters, and make campaign contributions.
Both are candidates for the Democratic party nomination, so the winner in
the February 25 primaries will run uncontested in the April 1 general
election.
Several LCAOA members agree to focus on Waukegan's sixth ward in an
effort to unseat incumbent Lawrence V. TenPas. Activities will
include voter registration drives, and providing other types of support to
challenger Keith E. Turner.
LCAOA confirms that all plaintiffs have been identified, and that a
federal lawsuit is planned.
February 7-8, 2003 - LCAOA participates in the First Hispanic
Business Expo of Lake County, IL, sponsored by Vision News. Many
Waukegan political candidates stop by the LCAOA booth and express their
opposition to the current inspection ordinance.
February 6, 2003 - A committee meets to develop a reasonable
position for the Association to take relative to an inspection
ordinance. In other words, what inspection program would be
acceptable to us?
A consensus is reached. We believe that the existing fire
department inspection procedures should be expanded to include all
rental housing in Waukegan. These inspections are geared toward
life, safety and fire-prevention, and are limited to common areas and
utility areas of rental buildings. No dwelling units are searched.
In other words, the Waukegan Fire Department should develop a uniform
inspection procedure to perform life/safety/fire-prevention inspections of
the basements and common areas of all rental housing. LCAOA will
welcome such a program, and it may save lives.
While we do not agree with the city's landlord licensing requirements,
LCAOA acknowledges that this is probably not going to go away. The
inspection fees, however, are unacceptable and must be eliminated.
January 26, 2003 - The Illinois
Rental Property Owners Association (IRPOA) announces plans to form a
taskforce to develop a bill that would prohibit municipalities from
licensing landlords and rental properties.
Cities such as Waukegan derive their authority for blanket apartment
inspections from their power to license and regulate apartment owners as
businesses. Presumably, if the State of Illinois prohibited
licensing, the cities would have no authority to conduct the inspections.
January 24, 2003 - A committee of Waukegan landlords begins
contacting individual political candidates to educate them on the problems
with the inspection ordinance, and elicit their position favoring or
opposing. The resulting information is communicated to LCAOA
membership.
January 22, 2003 - The City holds a news conference conducted by
building commissioner Charles Perkey along with attorney Anne Linn.
Mr. Perkey reported that approximately 100 units had been inspected since
beginning the program on January 6, 2003.
Mr. Perkey: "Actually, it's gone very well. There have
been minor problems with some landlords where we've had to get the
administrative search warrants.
"The vast majority of the inspections have gone extremely well,
and it seems that from the feedback that we're getting from our inspectors
that the majority of the landlords are not opposed to the program once
they see what we're doing.
"We have a five page checklist that covers all areas of the
building; the exterior, the interior common areas, and then the interior
individual units. If it's a multi-unit building, more than three
units, we may have the fire department there with us because their
responsibility is to inspect the common areas of these properties, when
they have the manpower available to helps us and assist in those areas.
"The inspector will do the common areas, the exterior, and with
the property owner or an agent on site they then go into the individual
units to perform the inspections."
What are they looking for?
"Basically, they're looking to make sure the building's habitable,
that there's no vermin, rodents, bugs, that there's no peeling paint in
great quantities on the walls, that the electrical outlets are not
overloaded, that they're not hanging out of the wall and that the faucets
aren't leaking; that they aren't dripping, that things are basically in a
good state of repair so it's a livable unit."
Overcrowding
"Part of the whole program as far as making sure that the number
of people that live in a unit meet the requirements of the property
maintenance code and the building code.
"If we find evidence of overcrowding as far as illegal units or
extra beds or whatever, they basically will check that [on the checklist
form] and will send it to the normal inspector for that area, who will go
back on a density inspection.
"But on the initial inspection we have determined that we're not
going to take the time to go through that at that particular point in
time. There's several issues that we just check and we will send
someone else back to work on it later. But, yes, it is an issue that
we are looking for."
What if violations are noted?
"We aren't issuing citations at this time. There have been
several units that had failed the inspection. The noncompliance
letters have not been sent yet due to a computer glitch.
"In the majority of the cases it's working. We have found
several problems in certain areas that we're working with those people to
address those problems.
"The noncompliance letter will be sent certified [mail].
[The landlord has] "thirty days to address the problems from the time
they receive the letter."
What if a tenant refuses to submit to voluntary inspection?
"There are no consequences if they don't allow us in. What
we have been able to do is get administrative search warrants through the
courts, then go back. Our interpretation of the program as long as
it's unilaterally enforced throughout the city, on every piece of property
in the city, the courts will give us a warrant to go in and complete the
inspection. At the time we have to get an administrative warrant to
go in and complete the inspection, we do have to take a police officer
with us because he is a member of the court."
So, what are you using for probable cause to get the search warrant?
Anne Linn: "Under the case law, if a city is engaging in a
systematic program of inspection, which we are, every rental unit will be
inspected under this program, and if the criteria for the inspection set
out clearly as being certain codes which in our ordinance it is the
property maintenance codes, life safety codes that are set out in our
ordinance, and if the way that the units are selected for inspection is
objective (in other words they're all being selected it's just a matter of
by month basis and area basis) there's no other illegal criteria used to
select each unit, then the standard for issuing an administrative warrant
is met.
"And that's under several cases starting with the 1967 Camera vs.
United States and more recently Black vs. The Village of Park
Forest. That's the kind of program that we're engaging in; so it's
not the same standard as if we were going to get an administrative warrant
just on an individual property because we had reason to believe violations
existed on that property."
So you're using the same reason for all the search warrants?
"Exactly, yes. Because that is what we're doing. We're
doing a program of inspections, we're picking the properties randomly, and
all the properties will be inspected, and the basis for the inspections
are set out in our ordinance. The inspectors are not using just
their own personal opinion about a unit or whatever. So under the
standards that we're using, it's a very tight, restrictive standard the
warrants can be issued for that purpose. Once a warrant is issued,
then we are required to take a police officer with us, because at that
point then, the inspection has been ordered by a court, and if a refusal
is given after that a police officer would need to come."
"This program that we're running is a licensing program for rental
properties. The landlords and owners of the rental properties are
conducting business in the city of Waukegan and they're licensed by the
city of Waukegan to do that. As a part this program, and ongoing
improvement in our licensing program, we want to insure that these
properties that we're licensing are satisfactory. And that's the
reason for it."
View the Waukegan Press Release
January 17, 2003 - LCAOA's full page ad hits the Waukegan News
Sun (page 4) newspaper. The ad is
published in cooperation with the Fair Housing Center of Lake County.
The News Sun publishes a letter
from Mayoral candidate Wayne Motley rebutting Mr. Setterland's letter of
January 10, along with Mr. Setterland's correction/retraction.
Bilingual newspaper Noticias Vision News publishes an editorial
and a hard-hitting story
on the inspections.
January 16, 2003 - Waukegan News Sun publishes a letter
to the editor from retired police officer Richard Slusser. An active
LCAOA member, Mr. Slusser owns rental property in Waukegan.
January 14, 2003 - Circuit Court Judge David Hall restores the
mayoral candidacy of the Rev. C.L. Fairchild. Republican candidate
Mark Hawn withdraws from the mayoral race. An updated list of candidates
(pdf
43k) is available. LCAOA will not be
endorsing any candidates, but will attempt to identify all candidates
who oppose the inspection ordinance and/or appear sympathetic to our
cause.
LCAOA, in cooperation with the Fair Housing Center of Lake
County (847-336-3247), prepares full-page display advertisements to run in
Waukegan English and Spanish language newspapers over the next few days.
The purpose of the advertising is to raise awareness of the inspection
ordinance, organize grass-roots resistance from the thousands of Waukegan
tenants and homeowners, and increase donations to LCAOA's legal fund.
January 12, 2003 - The Lake County Fair Housing Center has
provided a Spanish language translation of the Tenant
Notice (pdf 166k).
January 10, 2003 - News Sun publishes a blistering letter
to the editor from retired police officer Bert Setterland, about
inspections conducted at Lilac Ledge, one of Waukegan's nicest apartment
complexes.
January 9, 2003 - City inspectors, armed with warrants, begin
searching rental units where tenants previously refused access. In
the first inspections, the code inspectors are accompanied by agents from
the Waukegan police and fire departments.
January 8, 2003 - City inspectors secure Administrative
Search Warrants for rental units where the tenants have refused
access. The warrants are signed by Judge Helen Rosenberg Franks of
the Circuit Court of the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit: Lake County,
Illinois.
January 7, 2003 - Some tenants refuse to voluntarily allow the
city to inspect/search their rental units. One series of inspections
that is conducted results in a lengthy list of violations.
January 4, 2003 - LCAOA holds special meeting of Waukegan rental
property owners. Eighty people attend. A suggested Tenant
Notice is distributed. Also provided is a list of candidates
for the upcoming mayoral and aldermanic elections, and a legal
fund donation form. Some owners have inspections scheduled for
January 7, and members agree to show up in force at these inspections as a
sign of solidarity.
January 2, 2003 - Arnstein & Lehr attorney Thadford A.
Felton sends letter to Waukegan city
attorney Anne Conzelman Linn which addresses the outstanding
constitutional issues with the ordinance. The letter requests that
the city delay implementation of the ordinance until these issues are
resolved.
December 27, 2002 - LCAOA representatives conference with Robert
D. Butters, and decide to draft a letter to tenants, outlining the city's
plan to conduct the inspections, and providing a form to allow the tenant
to consent or decline voluntary inspections.
December 21, 2002 - Waukegan rental property owners begin
receiving inspection notices. LCAOA board members vote to call
special meeting.
December 18, 2002 - Arnstein & Lehr attorney Thadford A.
Felton prepares memorandum of Issues to be
Addressed Regarding the Waukegan Ordinance.
December 17, 2002 - Mr. Butters receives the rules
and regulations of the City of Waukegan concerning the residential
rental licensing & inspection program.
December 10, 2002 - The Waukegan News Sun publishes a letter
to the editor, written by Mark E. Pleasant, blasting citizens who wish to
exercise their constitutional protections. Apparently, Mr. Pleasant,
an investigator for the Lake County Sheriff, believes the U.S.
Constitution doesn't apply to anybody but him. The letter is a
reaction to the News Sun's 12/7 article.
Robert D. Butters addresses the general meeting of the Lake County
Apartment Owners Association in Gurnee, Illinois. Mr. Butters
stresses the point that landlords to not have legal authority to refuse or
allow warrantless inspections on their tenants' behalf. Only the
tenant has this right. Landlords do have the right to allow or
refuse warrantless inspections of vacant units and common areas.
LCAOA renews fundraising efforts in preparation for anticipated
litigation.
December 7, 2002 - The Waukegan News Sun publishes a front page story
on the city's request to share information on the home addresses of
students enrolled in the city. The article also describes LCAOA's
efforts to fight the inspection ordinance, and quotes member Dennis Eash.
December 4, 2002 - Robert D. Butters, with two LCAOA members,
meets with Waukegan Corporation Counsel Bob Massini, Building Commissioner
Chuck Perkey, and attorney Anne Conzelman Linn to discuss the
constitutional issues with the ordinance.
The City assures LCAOA that any constitutional issues will be addressed
and resolved when the implementing rules and regulations are issued.
The city agrees to forward the regulations to Mr. Butters when completed.
November, 2002 - Waukegan sends letter
to owners of rental property announcing plans to begin "an annual
inspection program of all rental units in the city," effective in
January of 2002. "The City of Waukegan has prepared a schedule
for the annual inspections. The schedule is based on a random
selection of properties to be inspected each month. The month that
your property is originally scheduled for an inspection will continue to
be the month your property will be inspected in subsequent years. It
will also be the month that your annual rental license is renewed."
October 17, 2002 - Robert D. Butters sends letter to Waukegan
Mayor Dick Hyde requesting a meeting with the mayor or his representatives
to discuss the constitutionality of the ordinance, and requests the
mayor's response by November 1, 2002.
September 30, 2002 - LCAOA representatives meet with Robert D.
Butters, attorney at Arnstein & Lehr (Chicago) to discuss the
ordinance and LCAOA's legal options. Mr. Butters had been retained
by LCAOA to review the ordinance and evaluate possible legal options.
Mr. Butters explicitly stated that the Waukegan ordinance is illegal,
in that it conditions the landlord's business license on his/her consent
to the inspection program. Under the United States Constitution,
inspections may be voluntarily allowed by the owner/occupant; otherwise an
administrative warrant is required. To force the landlord to
involuntarily accept these inspections as a condition of licensing, the
city denies the landlord a constitutional right. Several Illinois
appellate decisions support our position.
LCAOA's legal representatives will contact Waukegan officials to
discuss the constitutional issues and propose further changes to the
ordinance.
September 12, 2002 - Arnstein & Lehr furnishes LCAOA with
their analysis of the ordinance. Included in the analysis, Arnstein
provides a list of four principles used by courts to evaluate the
constitutionality of ordinances regarding searches of private residences:
- An administrative search of any private residence owned by one
person and rented to another must include a warrant procedure.
- Probable cause to issue a warrant to inspect must exist if
reasonable legislative or administrative standards for conducting an
areas inspection are satisfied with respect to a particular dwelling,
but that probable cause will not necessarily depend on specific
knowledge of the condition of the particular dwelling.
- Consent to search can substitute for a warrant to search a rental
property.
- Ownership of rental property does not imply consent to search the
rental property.
In Makula v. Village of Schiller Park, No. 95C2400, 1998 WL
246043 (N.D. Ill. 1998), Judge Coar struck down the portion of the
ordinance that required an owner to agree to the administrative search as
a prerequisite to the issuance or renewal of the landlord's business
license.
In Black v. Village of Park Forest, 20 F.Supp. 2d 1218 (N.D.
Ill. 1998), the court agreed with the tenants' argument that because the
ordinance did not contain an explicit requirement that Park Forest obtain
the consent of the tenant rather than the owner of the rental property for
the inspection, that the ordinance may be applied in an unconstitutional
manner. The court also found that administrative searches must be
governed by "reasonable legislative and administrative
standards" which meant that at a minimum authorizing ordinances must
contain a clear indication of the evils sought to be prevented by the
inspection program and some indication of the appropriate parameters of
the searches.
July 3, 2002 - Arnstein & Lehr files a Freedom of
Information Act Request requesting City records dealing with the enactment
of the ordinance.
June 17, 2002 - LCAOA engages Chicago law firm Arnstein &
Lehr to represent the Association in evaluation of a potential challenge
to the Waukegan ordinance.
May 6, 2002 - New Ordinance Enacted. In a 7 to 1 vote the Waukegan City Council enacts
a modified version of the landlord licensing ordinance that requires
annual inspections of rental units. Alderman Frank Harris, Jr. was
the dissenting vote.
Click here for the full
text of the ordinance.
Several aldermen had taken offense to comments made by one member in an
ill-timed letter to the editor of the News Sun newspaper. In the
letter, the member took the city's elected officials to task for
misplacing their priorities by worrying about Waukegan's image but failing
to focus on the root cause of Waukegan's problems; he felt that Waukegan
should be more focused on crime. The aldermen read these comments as
a criticism of Waukegan citizens and the police department, but they were
intended to chide the elected officials for not providing more
support to their police department.
The Waukegan aldermen demonstrated their inability to accept criticism
- constructive or otherwise - by enacting this ordinance; not on its
merits but in order to teach their critic and other landlords a
lesson.
Our next step will be to seek legal counsel who will review
the ordinance for us, and help us determine whether/how to pursue the
matter through the courts.
April 15, 2002 - At the City
Council Meeting, Alderman Larry TenPas offered a motion to end the
moratorium on inspections under Ordinance 01-O-127. Several aldermen
questioned the alderman's motion, and after discussion with the city
attorney, Mr. TenPas withdrew the motion.
Mr. TenPas then offered a motion to implement a new ordinance, which
was the draft we had read and discussed on April 8 (presumably with some
revisions). The motion was immediately seconded. During the
discussion period, Alderman Sam Harris, Jr. questioned the research behind
the ordinance, and asked if other Illinois cities similar to Waukegan in
size had been surveyed. Building Inspector Charles Perkey reported
that he had discussed the matter with Elgin personnel.
Mr. Harris then requested that Mr. Perkey go back and do more
research. Then, Alderman John Rickerd mentioned that he had received
an overnight letter from the "landlords association," presenting the idea
of inviting Karin Long from Milwaukee to meet with us and discuss
alternatives to inspections and ideas for how the city and the landlords
can work with each other instead of against each other.
Mr. Rickerd went on to say that, while he agreed that Waukegan had the
authority to impose inspections on rental property, the city should look
at all the angles first. "We will have to live with this ordinance
for a long time," he said. Then Alderman Rickerd exercised his power
to table the ordinance until the next council meeting.
Several aldermen expressed interest in attending the meeting with Ms.
Long, and Mayor Hyde promised to notify them as soon as the meeting had
been scheduled; presumably within the next two weeks. The mayor also
mentioned that he had talked to Ms. Long on the phone, and she had stated
that the proposed ordinance would be a violation of the U.S. Constitution,
by forcing inspections on dwellings without the occupant's
permission. This opinion contrasted with that of city attorney Ann
Linn, who wrote in a letter (read aloud by Alderman TenPas) that Waukegan
was clearly within their legal right and there was no constitutional
question whatsoever.
April 12, 2002 - Mayor agrees to table inspection
ordinance. In meetings with several LCAOA members on April
10 and April 12, Mayor Richard Hyde agreed to refer the inspection
ordinance to committee if it is presented for a vote at the next council
meeting on April 15. The mayor agreed to delay the ordinance vote
after LCAOA members suggested that the parties explore alternatives to
inspections by seeking ways to partner with the city instead of pursuing
an adversarial relationship. By referring the ordinance to
committee, it will not be voted at this time.
LCAOA has been in touch with Karin A. Long, head of
Milwaukee's landlord training program, who has offered to meet with the
parties to present her ideas on how the city and landlords can develop a
working partnership to improve the community. Ms. Long reports that
Milwaukee has been very successful using such an approach, and as a result
Milwaukee officials have not seen the need for mandatory housing
inspections.
Mayor Hyde agreed to invite Ms. Long to attend a meeting with Waukegan
landlords and city officials where she can offer her views and
suggestions. The meeting date has not yet been determined.
LCAOA maintains that Waukegan has sufficient legislation already on the
books to enforce compliance with building codes. Instead of imposing
costly and disruptive inspections on investors and tenants, LCAOA supports
development of a "Partnership" with the city to work together to improve
housing conditions.
April 8, 2002 - Around fifteen landlords meet with Alderman
Larry TenPas, Building Commissioner Charles Perkey, and City Attorney Ann
Linn, in the City Hall Council Chambers. Ann Linn repeats the city's
position that being a landlord is a "privilege." In order to enjoy
that privilege in Waukegan, the landlord's rental property must be
licensed. Yes, tenants have the right to refuse the inspection,
whereupon the city would decide whether to seek a search warrant.
The city would not seek a warrant unless they believe they have probable
cause, then it would be up to the judge to decide whether there is
sufficient cause.
It turns out that the tenant's right to refuse the inspection is
irrelevant -- because, if any tenant refuses inspection, the city will not
issue the license and will shut down the building. We
communicate our position that the city's stance will force a lot of our
buildings to be shut down, and we will litigate the issue in court.
The city's attitude is: If you don't like it, take us to court.
We did manage to review the ordinance at the meeting, and discuss
several sections that are in question; and the city agrees to review and
clarify some parts. The only justification provided for requiring
inspections before a vacant unit can be re-rented is that it's "for our
own good."
We have one more chance to defeat the inspection ordinance.
Alderman TenPas needs five votes in City Council to pass the bill, out of
a total of eight votes. If LCAOA can persuade four aldermen to vote
against the ordinance, it will not pass.
LCAOA has stressed our willingness to work with the city to improve
housing conditions in Waukegan, but we are unwilling to accept the
inspection ordinance as the solution. We will continue to search for
alternatives and present them to city officials; but an inspection
ordinance is not the way to secure our cooperation.
We encourage all Waukegan investors to stay in touch with their
aldermen. Apparently, Alderman TenPas and Alderman Balen are a lost
cause, so our focus should go to the remaining six: Aldermen
Cunningham, Rickerd, Figueroa, Harris and Needham, and Mayor Hyde.
If you haven't contributed to LCAOA's Legal Fund, now is the time.
April 4, 2002 - Building Commissioner Charles Perkey has
scheduled a meeting with area landlords for Monday, April 8, 2002 at 6:30
pm @ City Hall to review and discuss the proposed (revised)
ordinance. He provides a draft of the revised ordinance. Some
of the changes are (the section is shown before the change):
14-4b Multi-building apartment complexes would pay
$200 to license the entire complex, rather than $100 per building.
The
unit where the owner-occupant resides would be exempt from the license
fee. Presumably, it would also be exempt from inspection.
14-4d (i-v) Issuance of license is conditioned on
payment of inspection fees at time of filing. Inspection fees are
$25 per unit, and the city will conduct the inspections.
Reinspections will cost $15 under some circumstances.
14-4d (iii) The license inspection will determine
whether the property complies with the following codes:
- building
- zoning
- property maintenance
- life-safety
14-4d (vi) Vacant units must be reinspected before
they can be reoccupied. No charge for these inspections.
There seems to be a contradiction in the next two sections:
14-5 Compliant properties could waive the inspection
requirements for one year.
14-6b Properties passing inspection for 5 years would
be inspected on a 2-year basis. This schedule would remain in effect
provided the property remained more than 90% compliant with all applicable
city codes.
(There is no explanation as to how to determine 90% compliance.)
14-12g-h When a license is revoked, a notice would be
posted on the building notifying tenants they have 60 days to
vacate. "If you fail to vacate this building you will be in
violation of the ordinances of the City of Waukegan, and could also be
subject to fines not to exceed $750.00 per day of violation."
14-13 If an owner or occupant refuses to allow the
inspection, the city may apply to the Circuit Court for a search warrant
or other appropriate court
order.
March 25, 2002 - LCAOA will develop a strategy to
educate Waukegan tenants of their legal rights with respect to property
inspections. Tenants are not required to consent to an inspection of
their dwelling. In fact, landlords should get written consent before
allowing inspection of any tenant's abode. Without the occupant's
consent, government officials may not enter the premises without a search warrant, which may not be issued without probable
cause. Courts have ruled that search warrants issued without
probable cause are invalid. This requirement does not apply to an
apartment building's common areas, such as hallways and laundry rooms; the
landlord would likely be required to allow inspection of the common
areas. Also, there is some question about a vacant rental
unit: can the landlord deny access to inspectors since it is not
currently anybody's "dwelling"?
March 22, 2002 - LCAOA has learned that Waukegan is
taking steps to enforce two existing ordinances: One ordinance
requires that all real estate advertising include the property's zoning
classification on the sign and in any printed advertisement. The
other ordinance requires trash dumpsters to be enclosed. The
dumpster ordinance was revised at the March 18 council meeting to include
language requiring the dumpster to be placed on a hard surface. It
is unclear whether that surface must be concrete, or exactly what types of
surface will be acceptable. The city is also viewing property "for
sale" listings on the Internet, and acting on language they feel is
inappropriate, such as "bedrooms in basement." Apparently, basement
bedrooms are legal under certain circumstances, such as when there
is 7 ft. headroom and a direct exit, but Waukegan's stated position has
been "NO BEDROOMS IN THE BASEMENT."
March 20, 2002 - One LCAOA member met with Chuck
Perkey of Waukegan Building Department. Mr. Perkey says the
ordinance has been modified, and is ready to be sent to Alderman Larry
TenPas (legislative) for review. The ordinance is revised to
eliminate the requirement for professional home inspectors, but now
requires city-conducted inspections at owner expense. We will
continue to communicate to the City of Waukegan that there is an
alternative to inspections: working together with LCAOA to educate
landlords and improve Waukegan properties. Let's be allies - not
adversaries!
March 15, 2002 - Three LCAOA members meet with the offending
landlord, Javier C_. Mr. C_ has already been fined $200 in Housing Court.
He is invited to LCAOA meetings, encouraged to participate in the landlord
training program, and attend investor support group meetings (twice-around). Mr. C_ is
invited to contact LCAOA members with any questions he might have in the
future.
Potential suitable housing for the family has been identified, and
appointment set for Monday, March 18 to view the rental unit. A second,
backup rental property has been identified. The family will need to
complete applications and pass the landlord's normal screening
process.
March 10, 2002 - Two LCAOA members meet with Alderman Cunningham
and the troubled parents, Jimmy and April P_. LCAOA offers to search for
suitable rental housing for the family and also reach out to the offending
landlord to offer assistance. LCAOA suggests that Waukegan Housing Court
sentence offending landlords to the police-sponsored landlord training
program. Alderman Cunningham is not aware of the landlord training
program, but welcomes the suggestion.
March 4, 2002 - At the city council meeting, First Ward Alderman
Sam Cunningham approaches one LCAOA member with a problem. The city
received a letter from a family who had moved into a rental unit, only to
find that the basement flooded, the roof leaked, and the landlord was
unresponsive. The tenants called Code Enforcement officials, who inspected
the property. The Code officials discovered that the finished basement was
being used for sleeping quarters for this family (two adults and six
children), and ordered the family to move out of the building. Alderman
Cunningham wants LCAOA's response. The LCAOA members reply that they do
not support landlords who will not maintain or repair their properties,
and that the city should take any punitive action against the landlord
that they feel is necessary. After the council meeting, one LCAOA member
learns that Alderman Cunningham plans to invite the family to the next
council meeting, and use them as an example of problem landlords. The
family is also in need of new rental housing.
February 28, 2002 - Task force members, joined by
representatives from Lake County Realtors® and Fair Housing, as well as a
landlord-attorney, meet with city officials. City officials agree to
consider the license fees (how they are calculated), the requirement for
professional home inspectors, and the language requiring "no code
violations or other areas of concern or failure." Officials are adamant
that an inspection program will be implemented, covering life,
safety and maintenance issues. The city would consider utilizing city
employees to conduct the inspections (at owner expense). They will not
eliminate the licensing requirement or reduce the license fees. Building
Commissioner Charles Perkey admits that "no code violations" is an
impossible standard. Alderman Larry TenPas (legislative committee) admits
that most of the problems that the city needs to address are in 1 to 4
unit properties instead of the larger buildings, but offers no assurance
that the larger properties will be exempt from any future inspection
requirements.
February 22, 2002 - The Waukegan News Sun runs a front page
headline: "Council suspends apartment
ordinance," the story mentions the
Lake County Apartment Owners Association and quotes aldermen who say the
landlords have been professional in lodging complaints, and "weren't
threatening at all" in questioning the ordinance.
February 19, 2002 - At the Waukegan City Council meeting, one
LCAOA member commends the Waukegan Police Department for their landlord
training program and announces the next class is to be held on Saturday,
February 23. During Alderman time, Alderman John Rickerd states that he
has heard from numerous landlords who have expressed their opposition to
the inspection ordinance, and that he was told that the local apartment
association has created a "litigation fund," believing the ordinance to be
unconstitutional. At this point, Alderman Frank Harris, Jr. presents a
motion to declare a moratorium on the inspections until the Council can
revisit the ordinance and meet with area landlords. The motion passes
unanimously after some discussion. Mayor Hyde appoints the City Clerk to
arrange a meeting with the landlords.
February 12, 2002 - The LCAOA meeting is well attended, and
speakers include an attorney, a representative from the local Realtor®
association, and the local Fair Housing director. The legal fund is
introduced, and pledge forms distributed. A contribution of ten dollars
per (Waukegan rental) unit is suggested. Several thousand dollars are
collected at the meeting and over the next few days. LCAOA pledges to
return any donated funds that are not used to fight the Waukegan
inspection ordinance.
February 6, 2002 - At the Council meeting, Alderman Richard Hyde
is elected mayor, replacing the late Daniel T. Drew. Mayor Hyde's first
statement is a pledge to continue the programs started by the late mayor.
"The programs he started will continue," Hyde says. During audience time,
one LCAOA member speaks to the Council about "absentee landlords." City
officials have expressed resentment against landlords who do not live
within the City of Waukegan. This LCAOA member points out the double
standard, in that owners of other Waukegan businesses were not denigrated
if they lived elsewhere. This triggers a heated discussion within the
Council, with several aldermen acknowledging that not all "absentee"
landlords are bad. Others rail against slumlords, and vow to solve the
slumlord problem one way or another. Mayor Hyde assures the investors that
the ordinance will, in fact, be reviewed, and says there is no need for
landlords to speak against the ordinance at every council meeting.
February 5, 2002 - The task force meets and decides to devote
the regular LCAOA meeting of February 12 to the topic of the Waukegan
Inspection Ordinance. Members agree to telephone all identified rental
property owners to encourage their attendance. The task force also
purchases a 1/2 page advertisement in the weekend News Sun real estate
section. A legal fund is also planned.
January 30, 2002 - Mayor Daniel T. Drew dies of of a heart
attack. LCAOA issues press release offering condolences to the mayor's
family and friends. Succession issues are postponed until the next
Council meeting, to be held on Wednesday, February 6, 2002. Meanwhile,
city officials send letters to all licensed investors notifying them that
the City is moving forward with the inspection requirements. Owners of
rental property in Ward 1 and Ward 3 receive letters requiring them to
submit inspection reports by August 1, 2002.
January 28, 2002 - LCAOA issues a press release to the Waukegan
News Sun and the Chicago Tribune. The press release outlines the problems
with the Inspection Ordinance and provides LCAOA's reasons for opposing
it. The Association states that the City had sufficient laws on their
books to deal with any code or occupancy violations, but have been lax in
enforcing them in the past. The argument is made that it is unfair to the
investor majority who provide quality housing to enact costly inspection
requirements simply to catch the few substandard landlords. The press
release is not published or mentioned by either newspaper.
January 19, 2002 - In advance of the meeting, 240 flyers are
mailed to identified owners of Waukegan rental property. Around 50 people
attend the meeting, many who had not attended the previous meeting on the
5th. Several of the larger apartment complexes are represented at the
meeting. By this time, Alderman Frank Harris, Jr. has promised to speak to
other council members about revisiting the ordinance, and has asked for
time to accomplish this. Alderman Harris has also asked for a list of
"talking points," which was provided by the task force. The decision is
made to stay the course: continue phoning Waukegan Aldermen to express
concern about the ordinance and the devastating affect it could have on
Waukegan rental property.
LCAOA members continue the practice of attending Council meetings and
speaking against the ordinance.
January 18, 2002 - Task force members meet with Waukegan's Mayor
Daniel T. Drew. The mayor listens politely, is friendly and genial, and
tells us he isn't interested in reviewing the ordinance. His attitude is,
"The ordinance may need some tweaking, but first we're going to try it for
awhile, and see how it works."
January 7, 2002 - Several members begin attending
City Council meetings; the first such meeting is represented by around 35
investors. The co-chairmen address the Council during audience time, and
begin making the argument against the ordinance. One council member,
Alderman Frank Harris, Jr., says he is already having "second thoughts"
about the entire ordinance.
January 5, 2002 - A meeting is organized by the
Lake County (Illinois) Apartment Owners Association for members and other
interested investors. A task force committee is formed and selects
co-chairmen. Owners are encouraged to call their Waukegan Aldermen and
begin attending City Council meetings. Investors are cautioned to remain
polite and non-confrontational with City officials, so the officials can
be given a chance to backtrack gracefully.
December, 2001 - The City mails license renewal
notices to registered landlords, and includes an undated letter advising
owners of the new ordinance. In addition to the new inspection
requirements, the City has increased license fees up to
1,000%.
November 19, 2001 - The Waukegan, Illinois City Council enacts
ordinance 01-O-127, relating to the General Business License requirements.
The ordinance subjects all rental housing, except owner-occupied two-unit
properties, to annual business license requirements. To procure the
license, the owner must first hire a licensed home inspector (registered
with the City of Waukegan) to certify that the property has "no
outstanding code violations or other areas of concern or failure."
Properties are required to be recertified every three years. The ordinance
also authorizes any City official to "enter upon the premises" in order to
"ensure compliance with all applicable codes and regulations."
Without the home inspector certification, owners would not be able to
obtain the required business license. Penalties for operating without a
business license include water service termination, fines of $500 per day,
and imprisonment of up to six months.
1994 - The Waukegan, Illinois City Council enacts
an ordinance requiring
all non owner-occupied housing to be licensed by the city. The rationale
for this requirement is to enable city officials to access ownership
records in case of emergency. 11/22/07:
Note that the Association's name changed from Lake County Apartment Owners
Association to the Lake County Property Investors Association.
|