Skip to content

Just-Passed Eviction Reform Bill May Help Some Seattleites Stay off the Streets

The new legislation makes several statewide reforms

By Erica C. Barnett May 6, 2019

Subject: The Washington state capitol building exterior, it houses the State Senate, House of Representatives, the office of the Governor. Located in Olympia, Washington. Photographed in horizontal format.
Subject: The Washington state capitol building exterior, it houses the State Senate, House of Representatives, the office of the Governor. Located in Olympia, Washington. Photographed in horizontal format.

Last month, the Washington state legislature passed a sweeping eviction reform bill that gives tenants more time to pay rent before they can be evicted; gives judges new discretion when deciding whether to give tenants more time to pay or how much to penalize evicted tenants financially; and creates new financial incentives for landlords to rent to tenants using financial subsidies.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Nicole Macri, was a response to the problems outlined in a report by the Seattle Women’s Commission, “Losing Home,” earlier this year. That report revealed that tenants in Seattle are frequently evicted for failing to pay extremely small amounts of rent (as little as a few dollars), and that the county superior court judges—who determine whether tenants will be evicted—have little discretion to consider mitigating factors (like a one-time medical emergency) that cause people to fall temporarily behind on their rent. In a story about King County’s eviction court for the February 2019 print edition of Seattle magazine, one woman described receiving an eviction notice while in the hospital for late-stage kidney disease. Another case, described by Housing Justice Project attorney Edmund Witter, involved a man who was hospitalized for a degenerative spinal disease; the landlord refused to allow HJP to pay his rent because HJP was not the tenant.

The legislation makes several statewide reforms: 

  • It increases the number of days a tenant has to pay his or her rent once a landlord puts a “pay or vacate” notice on their door from 3 days to 14.
  • It gives judges the ability to consider mitigating circumstances when a tenant falls behind on their rent, such as unanticipated one-time expenses, a history of timely payments, and hardship to the tenant if they’re evicted. This provision also allows tenants to negotiate payment plans with landlords.
  • It requires landlords to put any payments a tenant does make toward rent first, rather than toward fees the landlord has charged the tenant for paying late. The “Losing Home” report found that late fees often added hundreds of dollars to tenants’ arrears, often outstripping the original amount they owed.
  • It limits the amount of attorneys’ fees judges can award to landlords, which were previously unlimited.
  • It expands an existing program that reimburses landlords for damages caused by tenants using rent subsidies. If a judge uses his or her new discretion to forgive rent or give a tenant more time to pay, and the reason is that the tenant is low-income or experiencing hardship, a landlord can now petition the Department of Commerce for reimbursement for that loss.
  • And it requires that 14-day eviction notices be written in simple language (and offered online in 10 different languages) so that tenants understand what is happening and how to respond. 

The legislation is now on Governor Jay Inslee’s desk, and will become law (if Inslee doesn’t get around to signing it) on May 28; then it goes into effect on July 28.

Editor’s note: This article has been updated since original publication.

Follow Us

What Trump’s Climate Rollback Could Mean for Washington

What Trump’s Climate Rollback Could Mean for Washington

A policy expert explains how repealing the EPA’s endangerment finding could weaken federal rules and shift more responsibility to states.

In February, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized the repeal of the endangerment finding, a key rule that has supported federal limits on greenhouse gas emissions since 2009. Established during the Obama administration, the endangerment finding determined that greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare. That determination gave the EPA authority under the Clean Air…

Andrew Yang: The AI Plot Twist, Politics, & What’s Next
Seattle Podcast

Andrew Yang: The AI Plot Twist, Politics, & What’s Next

Entrepreneur and former presidential candidate Andrew Yang joins Seattle magazine publisher Jonathan Sposato to talk about AI and the economic shifts it’s driving. Yang reflects on the ideas behind his 2020 campaign, how automation is changing jobs, and what those shifts could mean for politics. He also talks about the Forward Party and whether another…

Tax on Short-Term Rentals like Airbnb Again Under Discussion

Tax on Short-Term Rentals like Airbnb Again Under Discussion

In Washington, the legislation would allow cities and counties to tax the rentals to fund affordable housing.

The Washington Legislature is again considering empowering local governments to tax short-term housing rentals, much to the irritation of homeowners who rent out their properties on platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo. House Bill 2559 would allow cities and counties, starting in April 2027, to impose a tax up to 4% on short-term rentals to raise…

Getting to Know Katie Wilson

Getting to Know Katie Wilson

The Seattle organizer opens up about her path, her people, and the city she calls home.

Katie Wilson has spent much of her adult life organizing in Seattle, co-founding the Transit Riders Union and playing an instrumental role in designing and passing the JumpStart Seattle Payroll Expense Tax on large corporations. This week, however, with elections just around the corner, we’re focusing on the person behind the work.  Wilson is  running…