This summer, a small group of tenants in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Highland Park made history when they successfully forced the Los Angeles Housing Department (LAHD) and the city attorney to enforce the city’s Tenant Anti-Harassment Ordinance (TAHO) against their landlord. The campaign, which was conducted alongside the Los Angeles Tenants Union (LATU), lasted a year. In the end, LAHD and the city attorney’s office issued the first ever citations through the Administrative Citation Enforcement Program (ACE), a fine-based noncriminal approach to nuisance abatement and quality-of-life offenses, as well as ten criminal charges against the landlord using the TAHO ordinance originally passed in 2021. Considering the extremely limited enforcement of TAHO since its passage, this was a significant victory. The charges covered a variety of offenses including defying stop-work orders, claiming occupied units were vacant to get renovation permits, disturbing tenants’ peace and quiet, abusing right of entry, and unlawful construction — offenses that are classified as harassment and therefore in violation of TAHO.
Such offenses, of course, are hardly limited to this individual building or landlord. Tenant harassment is rampant across Los Angeles, a ubiquitous feature of tenancy in a city where landlords, both big and small, consistently use a wide-ranging set of harassment tactics to force tenant turnover and to save money on maintenance and repairs. To address this problem, the Los Angeles City Council adopted TAHO in June 2021 after persistent pressure from tenants and tenant advocates, as well as a 2018 Housing and Community Investment Department investigation that documented widespread harassment of tenants of rent-stabilized units. TAHO’s passage was hailed as a victory for the tenant movement. Yet despite receiving 21,402 complaints alleging harassment between August 21, 2021 and August 31, 2025 — including coordinated complaints from tenants…
Auteur: Mathilde Lind Gustavussen

