Form with which the secretary of a corporation notifies all necessary parties of the date, time, and place of the annual stockholder's meeting.
Form with which the secretary of a corporation notifies all necessary parties of the date, time, and place of the annual stockholder's meeting.
Single family residences and condominiums are exempt from the Rent Adjustment Ordinance if the unit is rented as one single unit and not rented room by room for more than 30 continuous days (like a rooming house).
Fully owner-occupied units, including single family homes. Hospitals, skilled nursing, or health facilities. Non-profits or substance abuse recovery facilities. Non-profits to support the homelessness.
Who Is Exempt From California Rent Control? New buildings which are not yet 15 years old. Owner-occupied buildings with less than three or four units (the number depends on the local regulations) Detached accessory dwelling units, also known as 'granny flats' or 'mother-in-law units' Government-subsidized housing units.
Fully owner-occupied units, including single family homes. Hospitals, skilled nursing, or health facilities. Non-profits or substance abuse recovery facilities. Non-profits to support the homelessness.
Some units have eviction protections, but do not have rent control protections: Units built after June 13, 1979. Most single-family homes and condos (if you moved in on or after ) Units that have undergone substantial rehabilitation. Units controlled or regulated by another government unit or agency.
The Tenant Protection Act caps rent increases for most residential tenants in California. Landlords can't raise rent more than 10% total or 5% + CPI increase (whichever is lower) over a 12-month period. No-fault evictions are prohibited, so landlords can't evict a tenant without cause.
A business license is required when a person is conducting, managing or carrying on the business of operating an apartment house or properties containing five (5) or more rental units. (A.M.C. 3.28.
Buildings with 10+ residential units must be fully registered with the local rent boards. That means each unit's unique “stats” must be on file (and updated annually) in a central data base hosted by the Rent Board. The data must include the names and contact information of individual tenants.