But you are assuming they were living beyond their means.
They were really not. They were able to find another place near paying similar rent.
The point is the house owners were basically getting around a local laws meant to protect renters against unreasonable rent increases.
Where I live, there is a law against raising monthly rent substantially on an existing renter. Owner can raise the rent for existing tenant say about 3 - 5%, once a year. I'm not sure about the exact percentage, but it is allowed only once a year for sure, to a specific percentage of the existing rent.
So the house owner gets around this law by periodically forcing out the renter with bogus reasons, so that they can rent out the property to the next renter at a substantially higher rate.
Instead of being able to increase rent from $2500 to $2700 after the renters lived there for first 2 years, property owner can raise the rent from $2500 to $3000 or even $3500. The property owner is basically getting around the local law to protect renters.
> They were able to find another place near paying similar rent.
I'm a bit confused here. I assume the new place was inferior in some way? Otherwise, I don't see why the landlord would try to force them out if they are paying market rent.
Well it seems some owners seem to think they can beat the market and get higher rent by chasing renters out every few years. So they can raise rent by 7- 10% instead of just say 3%.
They were really not. They were able to find another place near paying similar rent.
The point is the house owners were basically getting around a local laws meant to protect renters against unreasonable rent increases.
Where I live, there is a law against raising monthly rent substantially on an existing renter. Owner can raise the rent for existing tenant say about 3 - 5%, once a year. I'm not sure about the exact percentage, but it is allowed only once a year for sure, to a specific percentage of the existing rent.
So the house owner gets around this law by periodically forcing out the renter with bogus reasons, so that they can rent out the property to the next renter at a substantially higher rate.
Instead of being able to increase rent from $2500 to $2700 after the renters lived there for first 2 years, property owner can raise the rent from $2500 to $3000 or even $3500. The property owner is basically getting around the local law to protect renters.