Trouble ahead for landlords and, in fact, renters too

During my days of legal practice i represented many landlords and, in fact, I’ve occasionally been a landlord myself. Universally, a good tenant is a treasure, and landlords want to hang on to them. Bad tenants, however — late payers; screamers; drunken party hosts are just a few examples — are unwanted by both the landlord and, in the case of nuisance tenants, fellow tenants as well.

Connecticut landlord/tenant law is grossly lopsided in favor of tenants and against landlords, and it take can months, even, in the worst cases, years to evict a stubborn tenant, while the property deteriorates and the rent goes unpaid. Rather than pursue evictions, many times a landlord will simply wait out the lease period and hope that the tenant clears out. If the renters hold over, then the laborious process of eviction must be initiated, but if all that needs to be proved is the expiration of time, then at least the defenses are limited and, even in Connecticut, there will be an end in sight, eventually. If instead, as this bill will accomplish, “fault” must be proved, an eviction can be delayed forever — all while the tenant lives rent-free. Unfortunately for property owners, those rent payments are almost never recoverable.

But for the Hartford Yahoos, that’s a feature, not a (bed) bug.

Connecticut bill would ban ‘no-fault’ evictions — this time with Lamont’s backing

HARTFORD — One of the most hotly debated bills of Connecticut's past few legislative sessions is back again this year – this time with new backing from Gov. Ned Lamont.

Under a proposal that advanced out of the Housing Committee last week, landlords in properties of at least five units would be barred from evicting tenants at the end of their leases without specific cause to do so.

The bill's proponents say renters shouldn't be booted from their homes in retaliation for complaints or because a landlord wants to raise rents, while opponents say landlords should be free to choose whether to renew a lease.

While versions of the proposal have failed in previous sessions, advocates hope this year will be different, noting Lamont's office has told them the governor is onboard.

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"You're here for one of the most important changes that we're going to make this year," said Rep. Anthony Nolan, D-New London. "If someone is going to be uprooted from their homes, there should be a clear and legitimate reason."

It’s not hard to evict toublesome tenants. Oh! Well, okay, maybe it is, but that’s a good thing:

"There are many, many landlords in this legislature that are saying, 'Oh, it's too hard to evict somebody,'" said Sen. Martha Marx, another New London Democrat. "No, it's not. And guess what, it should be hard to evict somebody."

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Landlord groups and some Republican lawmakers quickly pushed back Tuesday, arguing the eviction proposal is unfair to those who own and manage rental properties, and could harm tenants by reducing the number of available apartments. It also could spur landlords to conduct more thorough background checks on prospective renters and complicate the removal of disruptive neighbors, they say.

"We create a perpetual tenant," said John Souza, president of the Connecticut Coalition of Property Owners. "If I have to take somebody in, they're going to be my tenant forever, and it's going to hurt the small people trying to look for an apartment."

Though landlords would still be able to evict tenants who fail to pay their rent or violate the terms of their leases, many prefer removing residents at the end of their leases, as opposed to pursuing formal evictions in court.

"Leases have a first day and a last day that landlords and tenants both agree to, and there are times when a landlord needs to non-renew a lease," Jessica Doll, executive director of the Connecticut Apartment Association, said in a statement. "When a tenant violates their lease or creates an unsafe situation that is disruptive or threatening to other residents, ending the lease at its termination date is the only reasonable tool housing providers have to protect their communities."

In a statement Tuesday, Rep. Tony Scott, R-Monroe, called the proposal "state-sanctioned trespassing," arguing it harms both landlords and tenants.

As has been the case in other recent legislative sessions, the eviction bill generated hours of testimony during a public hearing in February, with numerous tenants speaking in favor of the proposal and landlords testifying against it. Ultimately, the bill passed out of the Housing Committee last week in an 11-8 vote, drawing opposition from all six Republicans, as well as two Democrats.

Whereas previous versions of the "no-fault" eviction bill have advanced out of the Housing Committee but failed to come up for a vote in the House or Senate, Felipe said he's confident this year will be different. The governor is onboard, more legislators have embraced the cause and, unlike last year, there's no other major housing bill demanding lawmakers' attention, he noted.

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Marx, who serves with Felipe as co-chair of the Housing Committee, encouraged tenant activists to lobby her colleagues who don't support the bill, framing the issue as a clash between landlords and renters.

"There is a power struggle going on, and the landlords think they own you; they think they can tell you what to do." Marx said. "There are people that sit on the Housing Committee that think having a roof over your head is not a right. Well, it is a right."

Liberals always seem to want to create “rights” that somone else is required to provide. Funny, that.

Because Republicans treasure sideshows that deflect attention from their inaction on serious matters as much as their co-conspirators, the Democrats

Pam Bondi subpoenaed over ‘possible mismanagement’ of Jeffrey Epstein probe

A powerful Republican-led House committee subpoenaed Attorney General Pam Bondi on Tuesday to answer questions about “the possible mismanagement” of the Justice Department’s probe into deceased sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) wrote in a letter to Bondi that his panel was also interested in hearing about “the circumstances and subsequent investigations of Mr. Epstein’s death” as well as investigative materials gathered on his convicted accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

“As Attorney General, you are directly responsible for overseeing the Department’s collection, review, and determinations regarding the release of files pursuant to the Epstein Files Transparency Act, and the Committee therefore believes that you possess valuable insight into these efforts,” Comer said.

Five Republicans — Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Tim Burchett of Tennessee, Michael Cloud of Texas, Nancy Mace of South Carolina, and Scott Perry of Pennsylvania — joined 19 Democrats on the Oversight Committee to compel Bondi’s appearance via a motion put forward by Mace March 4.

The Justice Department has released more than 3 million pages of investigative materials on Epstein and Maxwell to the public following the passage of a bill in Congress in November 2025 that mandated their release.

The Epstein Files conspiracy theory is as irrelevant and dead as the paedophile himself, but the pols need it.

Stupid is as stupid does (Updated with a video of one of this woman’s sisters)

And treasonous

UPDATE

Banksville sale

4 Banksville Avenue, listed for $2.995 million, sold for $2.990 to a couple from Hinsdale, one of Chicago’s — and the country’s — wealthiest suburbs. Greenwich has been welcoming refugees since 1640, and the tradition continues.

These sellers did better than their predecessors: The house sold for $1.255 million in 2000, $1.760 in 2004, and then, after beginning at $1.695 in 2016, finally fetched just $1.215 in 2019. These owners made extensive renovations, including borrowing The Zebra from their stager, and it paid off.

As the duckpins fall

David Strom has an excellent post up on HotAir:

The Left Is Going Insane About the Coming Downfall of Cuba

The Cuban government is on its last legs, begging for help from the Trump administration, if you can believe that. 

Guess who is hardest hit by the coming collapse?

Greta Thunberg and the internationalist left, that's who. These eco- and social-justice warriors are demanding oil for Cuba!

The entire column is worth reading, of course; it’s David Strom, but this 100% genuine, absolutely not AI-generated video of the Supreme Commander addressing the people of Cuba is fabulous:

Different times, different market

10 Wyckham Hill Lane was listed in January for $4.2 million and has sold for $4.5. Back in February 2015, the then-owners originally listed the same house at $3.595 million and finally sold it in November 2017 for $1.675 million. Those buyers did a complete renovation in 2019 yet it still fetched just $2.325 million in 2020.

This price history is similar to another house on Wyckham that once belonged to a friend/reader of mine, No. 6 Wyckham; purchased for $5 million in 2004 ,and after a total renovation, he looked for $5.850 in 2010; it failed to sell for two years, even after dropping to $3.990 by 2012; brought back in 2014, he sold it that year for $4.250 million and got the hell out of Connecticut and moved to Florida.

6 Wyckham Hill — Redfin estimates its current market value at $6.384 million, and that’s probably in the ballpark


From Cuba, to Los Angeles, to Minneapolis, decline is a choice

At least there are no lines at the checkout counters

PowerLine

How to Destroy a City

American cities, like states, are moving in two very different directions. Some, like Miami, Nashville, Austin, Charleston and Salt Lake City, are thriving and growing. Others, like Chicago, Portland, Minneapolis, and–soon, anyway–New York, are caught in a downward spiral. It all depends on governance, at the local level but also on the state level, as it is much easier to thrive in Tennessee, for example, than in Oregon.

Minneapolis is a case in point. Its leadership in recent years has been terrible. The Minneapolis City Council is one of the most absurdly left-wing bodies in the U.S. And it suffers further from bad policies at the state level–high taxes, overregulation, rampant fraud and corruption, and so on.

As a consequence, commercial real estate values in Minneapolis have cratered:

Vacancy rates don’t tell the whole story, because they only measure space on which rent is not being paid. There is a vast quantity of office space in Minneapolis (St. Paul, too) that is in fact vacant, on which the tenant will stop paying rent as soon as its lease expires. So the worst is yet to come.

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Minneapolis’s collapse has nothing to do with covid, as many cities around the country are thriving. And it has nothing to do with climate; Minneapolis could only dream of growing at the rate of Sioux Falls. It is 100% due to lousy liberal policies at both the local and state levels.

It's no wonder blue state politicians and NGOs fight so fiercely to protect their kingdom; or as this editorial calls it, the nonprofit-industrial complex

plus another $500 million on related “services”

NYC burning $81K per homeless person — with nothing to show for it

State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli just revealed that New York City is now spending $81,000 per street homeless person — in a town where average take-home pay is no higher than $40,600.

And Mayor Zohran Mamdani want to spend more: City Hall projects it to hit nearly $97,000 in the coming year.

Overall, this spending has skyrocketed from $102 million in 2018 to $368 million last year, up 320% even as the street-homeless population grew just 26%.

Office of the New York State Comptroller

These figures don’t include about $500 million a year for supportive housing, mental health co-response teams, the NYPD’s homeless-clearing work or other outlays for this population.

It’s certain that almost none of the $81,000 actually benefits these street people: Outreach workers get paid to count the “unsheltered” and to try coaxing them into shelter or arranging some kind of housing they’ll accept. 

This is just one particularly damning example of how New York’s nonprofit-industrial complex has morphed the city’s multibillion-dollar outlays in the name of fighting homelessness into a jobs program that simply pretends to manage it.

UPDATE Reader DJ has thoughtfully supplied this video of another branch of the industrial welfare complex, the hospice scam, California edition; Teslas and BMWs for all.

Decades in the making, it’s finally lights out for the Wokes’ winter retreat

Trump didn’t create this shithole, communism did, but if he helped speed the process to its final collapse, good on him

Cuba's Energy Grid Collapses, Entire Island Loses Power

Officials in Cuba reported an island-wide blackout Monday in the country of some 11 million people as its energy and economic crises deepen...

The Ministry of Energy and Mines on X noted a “complete disconnection” of the country’s electrical system and said it was investigating.

Cuba has experienced multiple blackouts in the last few months, including one nearly two weeks ago which left a large part of the island without power. That particular blackout was caused by a failure at a particular power plant which took days to repair.

A failure at Cuba’s main thermoelectric plant has caused a massive blackout affecting two-thirds of the island, the Cuban government confirmed Wednesday. The partial collapse of the island’s National Electric System (SEN) — the second in a month — has left nearly 7 million of the island’s almost 10 million inhabitants without power. The outage is also affecting the capital, Havana.

It's not clear if today's collapse is the result of the same plant running out of fuel or if this has more to do with the plant itself being long past its expiration date.

William LeoGrande, a professor at American University who has tracked Cuba for years, said the country’s energy grid hasn’t been maintained properly and its infrastructure is “way past its normal useful life.”

“The technicians working on the grid are magicians to keep it running at all given the shape that it’s in,” LeoGrande said...

“And on top of all that, the Cuban government doesn’t have the hard currency to import spare parts or upgrade the plant or grid itself. It’s just a perfect storm of collapse,” LeoGrande said.

Fortunately, our favorite autistic is on the case:

Who ya gonna trust, your own country's networks and Democrats, or Al-Jazerra?

Stories you won’t see on America’s media or admitted by Chris Murphy:

A SURPRISINGLY CLEAR-EYED ANALYSIS, FROM AL-JAZEERA, NO LESS: “The US-Israeli strategy against Iran is working. Here is why.”

“When you look at what has actually happened to Iran’s principal instruments of power – its ballistic missile arsenal, its nuclear infrastructure, its air defences, its navy and its proxy command architecture – the picture is not one of US failure. It is one of systematic, phased degradation of a threat that previous administrations allowed to grow for four decades.”

UPDATE: As I was saying …