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Aaron Bailey's avatar

There’s a very similar ongoing problem with sober living homes. You’ll read exposés that, within 2 paragraphs of each other, castigate one home or provider for “kicking recovering addicts to the curb with no notice or legal eviction!” and another for “allowing an environment where residents still drink and do drugs, pulling others into relapse!”

….Well, polemic and slant aside, what other options are there? It’s a home for adults, not an inpatient hospital. You can’t stop people at the door and subject them to a search. So if a resident relapses (within or without the home), you can either (a) preserve the sober environment by kicking them out and sending them back to detox immediately (thereby catching flak for not going through a full court eviction), or (b) go through a full court eviction, leaving the relapsed resident in close proximity to the other recovering residents (thereby catching flak for “allowing” a non-sober environment).

There is no magic “do a full court eviction but also keep the home 100% drug and alcohol free” process. What are providers supposed to do, spank them? Yell at them? If an adult decides to drink in his living room, how do you actually stop them other than kicking them out of the home?

P.A. Brown's avatar

Indeed, the importance of balance, always! This may be another of those cases where it's not so much an either / or on good cause than a question of how a good cause law is drafted. Clearly small landlords should not be subject to the same standard as multifamily ones. Clearly all landlords should be able to evict (easily) abusive and disruptive tenants. And programs that provide assistance with rent are a better option than good cause when it comes to missed rent payments. At the same time, we've seen cases of tenants being evicted from multifamily housing for organizing tenant associations or otherwise persisting in advocating for fixing code violations. The threat of such evictions can discourage others from organizing. Tenant associations or any type of union may be a plus or minus overall; the right to organize is a point of fairness. Retaliatory evictions do, however, seem wrong and a good candidate for a somewhat narrower good cause protection that many tenant rights groups want. Personally, I like the term “just cause” better than “good cause”, but that’s just me. I’ve been a tenant and an owner.

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