TITLE
Recommendation to declare ordinance amending the Long Beach Municipal Code by amending Chapter 9.16 in its entirety, relating to abatement of public nuisances caused by illegal conduct involving sale or manufacturing of controlled substances, read and adopted as read. (Citywide)
DISCUSSION
The Office of the Long Beach City Attorney has for the past decade, participated in a statewide pilot program enacted as Civil Code section 3486, allowing the Office to file unlawful detainer actions due to narcotics-related nuisance activity occurring at rental properties within the City of Long Beach. These unlawful detainer actions are aimed at evicting tenants who sell or manufacture narcotics from a rental unit. The eviction of a nuisance tenant from a particular rental unit has proven an effective tool to make neighborhoods safer, while at the same time, reducing the need for police services and their associated costs.
In accordance with the Civil Code requirements, the California Research Bureau conducted a study of the California cities participating in the drug eviction program. In 2013, the Long Beach City Attorney’s Office reviewed 2,899 reports and caused 282 tenant relocations or evictions. The study concluded that Long Beach made the most efficient and intensive use of the pilot program.
The State’s pilot program has sunset. However, the Legislature amended Civil Code section 3486 to allow cities throughout California to adopt similar versions of the pilot program as it pertains to narcotics. Legislation is currently pending to allow cities to adopt similar provisions related to the unlawful possession of weapons and/or ammunition. If and when such legislation passes, City Attorney’s Office will provide an ordinance to include this category of nuisance.
In order to continue to keep Long Beach neighborhoods safe, the City Attorney’s Office recommends the City Council adopt the proposed ordinance authorizing the City Attorney’s Office to cause t...
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