accessibility tools
Post Type

The Mercury News: Landlord group pays ‘activists’ to oppose Bay Area rent control measure

April 4, 2025—The Mercury News’ Housing Reporter Kate Talerico speaks with Staff Attorney Tahirah Dean on a scheme by the California Apartment Association to pay activists $250 to attend a Concord City Council meeting and speak in support of weakening the existing rent cap/stabilization ordinance.

Tahirah Dean, an attorney with the tenant rights group Public Advocates, said that the pro-rent control groups’ tactics mirror tactics that Elon Musk has used in Wisconsin, paying voters $100 to sign petitions in a state Supreme Court election campaign.

“People are not shy about getting what they want, and they’ll use money to do that,” Dean said. “They’re not really trying to cover up how money is influencing politics.”

Read the full story.

Related Posts

Newsweek: California Housing Market Could Change Under New Bill

Even in cities building housing at scale, lower-income renters are being left behind and paying more. Newsweek reports on Public Advocates' co-sponsorship of SB 1091, a bill that would convert existing market-rate units into long-term affordable homes—putting state resources directly in the hands of the communities hardest hit by decades of redlining and disinvestment.

Read more

SF GATE: Calif.’s newest homelessness solution is letting college kids sleep in their cars

Public Advocates' Director of Legislative Affairs Michelle Pariset, speaks to the Sacramento Bee about this year's unusually hard advocacy to get stronger protections for renters in the most expensive state to rent, particularly as legislators speak out about making affordability concerns top priority.

Read more

The Sacramento Bee: Bills to help Ca renters didn’t get to Newsom’s desk in 2025. Which ones and why?

Public Advocates' Director of Legislative Affairs Michelle Pariset, speaks to the Sacramento Bee about this year's unusually hard advocacy to get stronger protections for renters in the most expensive state to rent, particularly as legislators speak out about making affordability concerns top priority.

Read more