Brooke Noble has lived in Reno for about a decadeโand in the same one-bedroom apartment for four years. As a longtime renter, sheโs used to the fact that apartment units often go up a bit in cost from year to year. But this year, she was shocked by just how much.
โThereโs an annual increase, but itโs usually, you know, 50 dollars or something that it goes up,โ she said. โSo this year when it went up 350 dollars at once, I was a little surprised.โ
Actually, surprised doesnโt cover it. When Noble found out her rent was going up nearly 44 percent at onceโfrom $750 to $1050โshe was outraged and turned to social media and local news outlets to talk about it. On April 26, she talked with television station KTVNโexplaining that sheโll have to move from the neighborhood she loves and relocate near Verdi. Noble feels like sheโs losing more than the place she calls home.
โThis is just where my friends are, my community,โ she said. โPretty much since I moved to Reno, Iโve lived in this neighborhood. I know a lot of people in this immediate area, a lot of the neighbors, the people around here. And everybody in this building has been pretty close. We play board games and barbecue. Weโre those kind of neighbors.โ
Or they were. According to Noble, after she went on television, the neighbors in her four-unit apartment complex were given notices of non-renewal on their leases. Save for one person, they, like Noble, must all find new places to live by the end of the month.
โActually, my upstairs neighborsโ rent was not going up as much, and they were going to accept the increase,โ Noble said. โBut after the KTVN story, everybody got an email that their leases werenโt going to be renewed. So there was previously an offer to extend the lease, and then, after the KTVN story, they retracted that from everybody and gave everybody 30 days.โ
Noble also received another notice that dayโa cease and desist from attorney Mark Smallhouse, the legal representation for Erica Mirich and Sean Martin, the landlords. The letter argues that the rent increase on Nobleโs unit is in line with current market trends for the area. It reads in part: โIt is unfortunate that you have personally attacked Ms. Mirich by sending untrue and libelous emails to Ms. Mirichโs employer Truckee Meadows Tomorrow. You have also threatened additional personal attacks on Ms. Mirich and Mr. Martin by going to the press and threatening to go to the Renoโs Mayors [sic] Office.โ
The letter ends by stating that further actions by Noble would be met with legal action by her landlords. Asked for comment on the cease and desist letter, Smallhouse responded via email, writing, โYes, I did send a letter to Ms. Noble. Unfortunately, she was paying significantly below-market rent for her apartment in the Midtown area. Her lease was due to expire, and my client, who purchased the building during the last lease term, sought to raise the rent to its current fair market value, and was planning a number of improvements to the complex. Ms. Noble lives in a 4-plex. My client has rented other units in the 4-plex at a higher rate of rent, and has had a waiting list for those units. The increase in rent was based upon surveys of similar rental units in the area.โ
After receiving the letter, Noble did to go to the City of Reno with her concerns, though not to the mayorโs office directly.
โI took this issue to City Council and to Oscar Delgado,โ she said. โAnd his office called me back and let me know, you know, the city is actually powerless on doing anything about rent control or rent stabilizationโor anything to control the rents in this town. They told me their hands are tied.โ
The City of Reno is among many municipalities in Nevada that hold the view that the addition of clarifying language within Nevada Regulatory Statutes is necessary to authorize them to take action on affordable housing. It is the position of legal counsel for the State of Nevada that existing law already allows cities and counties to pass affordable housing policies such as inclusionary zoning and rent control without approval from the state. Thatโs because existing law already โauthorizes a board of county commissioners or the governing body of an incorporated city to exercise powers necessary or proper to address matters of local concern, whether or not such powers are expressly granted to the board or governing body.โ But the legal counsels of some cities and counties disagree.
Senate Bill 398, sponsored by Senator Julia Ratti, is intended to address this. The bill, which has made it through the Senate and is now in the Assembly Government Affairs committee, would amend state statutes to specifically include affordable housing as a matter of local concern. Asked for the cityโs position on whether this clarifying language is necessary, Director of the Office of Policy and Strategy Dylan Shaver made the following statement:
โThe City of Reno supports any legislation that enhances or clarifies our ability and authority to provide service to our Reno family. Affordable housing has hit our city hard, and SB 398 aims to give local governments broader authority to address this policy challenge at the local level. While lawyers can debate about the specific need for legislation like this, the bill itself will bring clarity that this is an issue that cities play a big role in fighting.โ
Noble said sheโs hoping SB 398 will pass, though she doesnโt think itโll be a magic bullet for the affordable housing crisis. Her new rental unit is smaller and cheaper, and sheโs thinking about using the money sheโll save to eventually put a down payment on a condo.
โThat might be the way I goโbecause I donโt know if things are going to improve,โ she said. โEven if this bill does pass, what is it going to be like to get a resolution passed through city council, and what is that going to look like? Are rents going to go down? Are they going to be capped? I donโt know whatโs going to happen.โ
