2024 Kansas City metropolitan area rent strike | |||
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Date | October 1, 2024 – present [1] [2] | ||
Location | Kansas City metropolitan area, Missouri
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Caused by |
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Goals | |||
Methods | |||
Status | Ongoing | ||
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Since October 1 2024, members of the Kansas City Tenants Union have been on rent strike. The union's members in Kansas City, Missouri and Independence, Missouri voted to take the action after failed negotiations with their landlords and Fannie Mae.
Tenants of Independence Towers and Quality Hill Towers—the two apartment complexes involved with the dispute—have complained about poor living conditions, with maintenance reports going unaddressed. This is the first rent strike in the area since 1980, and the first ever targeting the federal government of the United States. The goals of the strikers are federal rent regulation, collectively bargained leases, and new ownership for the complexes.
Sentinel Real Estate Corporation labeled the tenants claims made against them as false and claimed that they were working with the tenants union and were starting maintenance; they said that the strike prevented them from doing so. Tenants have claimed that they had seen no significant improvements and said the landlord refused to meet with them to discuss the issue.
Quality Hill Towers is an apartment complex owned by Sentinel Real Estate Corporation, located at 817 Jefferson Street in the West Bottoms neighborhood of Kansas City, Missouri. The building was purchased by the company through a $9 million loan provided by Fannie Mae. Fannie Mae declared the property to be in poor condition and gave Sentinel the loan in an attempt to refinance the complex. [4] [2] It is estimated to house over 250 residents, 140 of which have joined the Kansas City Tenants Union (KC Tenants). Tenants of Quality Hill Towers have stated that the residence has had poor living conditions, with them having to deal with pest infestations and plumbing issues. Tenants were threatened with eviction when they brought up the situation to the landlords, and maintenance requests went unaddressed. [4]
Independence Towers is an apartment complex owned by TriGild, Inc., located in the town of Independence, Missouri. The ownership of the building was given to TriGild after its previous owners, FTW Investments and Tango Management, were ousted by a court in May 2024 after failing to pay back a loan to Fannie Mae. [2] In a similar fashion to Quality Hill Towers, Independence Towers tenants have complained about poor living conditions. [5] Independence Towers passed its city inspection in 2023 amid demand for action. [6]
Following failed negotiations with the landlords and Fannie Mae, the Quality Hill Towers Tenant Union and the Independence Towers Tenant Union voted in favor of a strike starting on October 1, per an announcement by the Kansas City Tenants Union. [7] [2] This is the first rent strike in Kansas City since 1980, and described by tenants as the first ever targeting the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. [8] [6] Tara Raghuveer, director of the union, stated they were targeting the American federal government as a way to criticize the systemic issues of the rental market. [9] Tenants initially refused to pay over $60,000 in rent until their demands were met, [6] which included: [2]
Sentinel distributed notices to strikers as a "friendly fall reminder", which were burned in retaliation. [10] [8] On October 25, Fannie Mae authorized $1.35 million for repairs at Independence Towers. Union leaders characterized the payout as a bailout and demanded to negotiate directly with FHFA director Sandra Thompson. [11]
The strike continued on November 1, bringing the total withheld rent between the two properties to $125,000. [12] About 24% of renters living in Quality Hill Towers and 57% of renters at Independence Towers were on strike as of November 2024. According to Raghuveer, KC Tenants has been encouraging other tenants unions nationwide to join the strike. [13]
In December 20, NPR reported the rent strike as the longest recorded in Kansas City's history. [14] The Sentinel Real Estate Corporation sent eviction notices to 16 tenants, resulting in KC Tenants accusing Sentinel of retaliatory evictions. [14]
Sentinel labeled the statements made by the Kansas City Tenants Union as false, and claimed that they were working with the union. They revealed that maintenance was underway, and asserted that the strike prevented the repairs from happening. A statement from the Quality Hill Towers Union said that several attempts to negotiate with the landlord had been unsuccessful. [10]
Raghuveer has claimed that tenants have not seen any significant improvements and that the landlord's statement "added fuel to the fire." [9] [2] Kansas City metropolitan area representative Emanuel Cleaver supported the strike after a visit to Independence Towers, where he described the apartment complex's condition as "horrible". [2] [15]
Kansas City, Missouri is the largest city in the U.S. state of Missouri by population and area. Most of the city lies within Jackson County, and other portions spill into Clay, Platte, and Cass counties. It is the central city of the Kansas City metropolitan area, which straddles the Missouri–Kansas state line and has a population of 2,392,035. As of the 2020 census, the city had a population of 508,090, making it the 37th most-populous city in the United States, as well as the sixth-most populous city in the Midwest. Kansas City was founded in the 1830s as a port on the Missouri River at its confluence with the Kansas River from the west. On June 1, 1850, the town of Kansas was incorporated; shortly after came the establishment of the Kansas Territory. Confusion between the two ensued, and the name Kansas City was assigned to distinguish them soon after.
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