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Mass. Will Vote On Rent Control

Key Victory for Opponents; Supporters Decry Ruling as Dangerous Precedent

By Todd F. Braunstein

Voters across the state will go to the polls in November to decide the fate of rent control in Massachusetts, thanks to a Supreme Judicial Court ruling yesterday declaring a referendum on the issue legal.

If the electorate outlaws rent control, the ban would affect 16,000 Cambridge households--half its rental stock--and a quarter of the city's population, said Terry Morris, executive director of the city's Rent Control Board.

The decision represents a major victory for group seeking to ban the price ceilings. Activists had made several unsuccessful attempts to end rent control through the State Legislature and various city councils.

Meanwhile, rent control advocates said they are upset about the setback, but vowed to fight on.

The court ruled that a referendum on rent control does not violate the "home rule" provision in the state constitution.

The home rule clause says that an initiative petition cannot bring to the voters any measure whose operation is restricted to one or a few towns in the state.

The city of Cambridge and several activists filed a complaint charging that a referendum on rent control infringed on this right, and a hearing was held on May 5. The suit came in the wake of a petition calling for a vote on the price ceilings.

The city argued that a vote would be illegal since rent control is presently in effect in only three municipalities--Boston, Brookline and Cambridge.

In other words, the city said it would be unfair for the entire citizenry of Massachusetts to make this decision, when its results would impact just three cities.

But the court ruled that the rent control ban is not simply a local issue. In the nine-page decision, the court noted that the it is "within the power of a municipality to enact a rent control program only when the [State] Legislature has explicitly delegated that power to the municipality."

Rent control is thus an issue of statewide concern and is hence subject to the initiative process, the decision said.

If Massachusetts voters do throw out rent control, municipalities could still, in fact, implement it on a voluntary basis.

But Denise A. Jillson, president of the anti-rent control Massachusetts Homeowners Coalition, said last week that there would be a big difference.

"There will be strict guidelines, putting responsibility on the city or town," Jillson said.

For example, she said, if a city decided to implement rent control, it would have to compensate home owners for the difference between the ceiling and the market price.

Rent control opponents rejoiced over the court's decision yesterday.

Cambridge City Councillor William H. Walsh, an outspoken

opponent of rent control, said seeing rentcontrol go to the voters is "probably the biggestvictory I have had."

"They violated everybody's consistutionalrights with rent control for their own politicalgain," he said of fellow councilors who supportthe ceilings.

Walsh compared the struggle of rent controlopponents to that faced by American colonists inthe 18th century.

Rent control supporters "just went too farunder the guise of home rule, and the peoplerebelled, as they did 200 years ago," Walsh said.

Jillson also said she was "delighted" with theruling.

She said she hasn't started planning apre-referendum push but hopes to build a networkaround small property owners.

But as pleased as rent control supporters, weretheir opponents were equally upset.

Rent control advocates universally denouncedthe ruling as a bad precedent, and said it wouldhurt thousands of Cambridge residents.

City Councilor Katherine Triantafillou said shethought the decision marked "a sad day for thetenants and for the city of Cambridge."

"I'm surprised at the decision," Triantafillousaid. "It seems to me that as city ought to beable to pass rules and regulations without beingsecond guessed by" the state.

Triantafillou added that a ban on rent controlwould devastate the city.

If the ban goes through, "there will be a lotof displacement of low income people,"Triantafillou said. "I truly believe there will bea lot of hardship."

Lead plaintiff Charles A. Ash, a Cambridgeresident who lives in a rent-controlled apartment,agreed.

"This would reduce Cambridge into very richpeople and very poor people in subsidizedhousing," Ash said. "If this goes through, I'll beout on the streets."

Ash, who works part-time for Harvard, addedthat the decision "destroys home rule, a veryimportant part of the legal framework in thisstate."

Thomas M. Menino, mayor of Boston, alsoobjected.

"I oppose this action, which gives the peoplein Wellesley or Lee the authority to vote onmeasures taken by local officials," Menino said ina statement.

Cambridge Mayor Kenneth E. Reeves '72, a rentcontrol supporter, is on vacation, according tohis office.

The decision of the Supreme Judicial court wasthe latest in a series of victories for rentcontrol opponents.

Supporters of the price ceilings challenged theoriginal petition in court, charging fraud andduplication of signatures.

But on April 22, a judge ruled that the minimumnumber of signatures was, in fact, obtained. Thatdecision is under appeal

opponent of rent control, said seeing rentcontrol go to the voters is "probably the biggestvictory I have had."

"They violated everybody's consistutionalrights with rent control for their own politicalgain," he said of fellow councilors who supportthe ceilings.

Walsh compared the struggle of rent controlopponents to that faced by American colonists inthe 18th century.

Rent control supporters "just went too farunder the guise of home rule, and the peoplerebelled, as they did 200 years ago," Walsh said.

Jillson also said she was "delighted" with theruling.

She said she hasn't started planning apre-referendum push but hopes to build a networkaround small property owners.

But as pleased as rent control supporters, weretheir opponents were equally upset.

Rent control advocates universally denouncedthe ruling as a bad precedent, and said it wouldhurt thousands of Cambridge residents.

City Councilor Katherine Triantafillou said shethought the decision marked "a sad day for thetenants and for the city of Cambridge."

"I'm surprised at the decision," Triantafillousaid. "It seems to me that as city ought to beable to pass rules and regulations without beingsecond guessed by" the state.

Triantafillou added that a ban on rent controlwould devastate the city.

If the ban goes through, "there will be a lotof displacement of low income people,"Triantafillou said. "I truly believe there will bea lot of hardship."

Lead plaintiff Charles A. Ash, a Cambridgeresident who lives in a rent-controlled apartment,agreed.

"This would reduce Cambridge into very richpeople and very poor people in subsidizedhousing," Ash said. "If this goes through, I'll beout on the streets."

Ash, who works part-time for Harvard, addedthat the decision "destroys home rule, a veryimportant part of the legal framework in thisstate."

Thomas M. Menino, mayor of Boston, alsoobjected.

"I oppose this action, which gives the peoplein Wellesley or Lee the authority to vote onmeasures taken by local officials," Menino said ina statement.

Cambridge Mayor Kenneth E. Reeves '72, a rentcontrol supporter, is on vacation, according tohis office.

The decision of the Supreme Judicial court wasthe latest in a series of victories for rentcontrol opponents.

Supporters of the price ceilings challenged theoriginal petition in court, charging fraud andduplication of signatures.

But on April 22, a judge ruled that the minimumnumber of signatures was, in fact, obtained. Thatdecision is under appeal

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