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South Florida lawmaker pushes bill to lower rental application costs

A plant partially covers for rent sign in a yard.
Tom Hudson
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SA国际传谋
A for rent sign outside a single family home in Miami-Dade County in Dec. 2024.
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A South Florida state legislator has introduced a bill ahead of this year's legislative session that could make the housing rental process cheaper for tenants. The ongoing effort comes in response to high housing costs and growing calls for both parties to make changes in the housing market.

The proposal would allow landlords to accept reusable reports, like credit and eviction history. That way, potential renters don鈥檛 have to pay separate fees for these reports when making multiple rental applications at the same time 鈥 an approach used by many as the affordability crisis increases competition for units.

Democratic State Representative Jervonte Edmonds 鈥 who represents parts of Palm Beach County such as West Palm Beach and Lake Worth Beach 鈥 said the purpose behind the is to not only "simplify" the rental application process. For many people, the first step to becoming homeowners is renting, so he also hopes the bill will 鈥渞educe barriers for people to become homeowners one day."

Edmonds told SA国际传谋 the repeated credit pulls are 鈥渞edundant鈥 because credit reports don鈥檛 change that much in such a short period of time.

鈥淎nd it's also very expensive for homeowners or renters to continuously pull their credit, lower their credit, and pay an additional fee everywhere they go,鈥 he said.

READ MORE: Need help affording rent or trying to own in South Florida? Here's a list of resources

The idea isn't uncommon. Portable tenant screening reports, or PTSRs, exist in other states, like and , to varying degrees. A landlord in New York can charge a fee for background and credit checks, but the fee can't be more than $20 or the actual cost of the check. And if the tenant provides a recent report within 30 days, the fee is waived.

In Florida, there are no state laws capping or regulating rental application fees, which typically cost under $50.

Edmonds notes the success of Florida's version depends on it's enforcement mechanism, buy-in from landlords, and policies addressing the stubborn housing supply shortage.

Landlord transparency

As part of the legislation, the bill aims to promote 鈥渂etter transparency,鈥 requiring landlords to disclose their evaluation metrics, such as rental history and minimum credit scores. Edmonds said it's an effort to promote fairness and reduce bias in the rental market.

鈥淥ftentimes people are denied and have no reason why,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd there's nothing in statute that would empower landlords to give them that transparency. So that's exactly what we want to do.鈥

State Representative Jervonte Edmonds is the sponsor of the "Reusable Tenant Screening Reports" bill. He represents parts of Palm Beach County like West Palm Beach and Lake Worth Beach.
Jervonte Edmonds
State Representative Jervonte Edmonds is the sponsor of the "Reusable Tenant Screening Reports" bill. He represents parts of Palm Beach County like West Palm Beach and Lake Worth Beach.

He wants the metrics to be open and standard across the board. There are some systemic kinks to work through, though.

Florida landlords, who often use tenant screening reports to conduct criminal backgrounds check, income, credit history, and other landlord references, could face several challenges when using reusable tenant screening reports: Landlords may be concerned over the outdated negative information, potential for fraud and how disputes are handled if multiple errors are discovered during the verification process.

The tenant background check industry may make matters worse. Repeated errors baked within background checks often lead to higher costs and reduce access to rental housing. A 2022 from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reviewed 24,000 complaints that showed that renters often face outdated or inaccurate information in their reports, often with no recourse.

Enforcement may be the greatest challenge, if it passes. The bill is voluntary, Edmonds said 鈥 landlords are encouraged to opt into this system, not mandated. If landlords do opt-in, it will be 鈥渞equired by law that they present鈥 those metrics.

That means finding ways to encourage landlords 鈥渃ompanies, these agencies, or homeowner associations鈥 to join and be transparent, which could mean incentivizing landlords with a potential tax credit.

Edmonds said he鈥檚 working to put safeguards in place to ensure that these transparency reports are used fairly by landlords. This current bill is a 鈥渕echanism to create transparency.鈥

鈥淢y second bill is to create enforcement,鈥 he said.

Florida's 2025 Regular Legislative Session is scheduled to begin on March 4, 2025. If his first proposal is passed, the law would go into effect on July 1, 2025.

Wilkine Brutus is the Palm Beach County Reporter for SA国际传谋. The award-winning journalist produces stories on topics surrounding local news, culture, art, politics and current affairs. Contact Wilkine at wbrutus@wlrnnews.org
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