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To: Tim Gladhill, Kurt Ulrich, Dean Kapler, and other interested parties <br />From: Michael Healy <br />Re: Owner Occupancy versus Absentee Landlords <br />There are a lot of hard to measure variables at play in the seemingly endless debate about the <br />extent that homeownership versus rental affects the quality of life in neighborhoods and the quality of <br />the housing stock in those neighborhoods. There is fairly broad consensus that long-term residents of a <br />neighborhood tend to have more investment in the neighborhood's well-being and a greater interest in <br />forming relationships and building up social capital. Because of the high costs associated with buying <br />and selling a home, homeowners tend to relocate less frequently than renters and therefore tend to <br />have longer tenures and be more stable as community members. Research suggests, however, that <br />some types of rentals experience similar trends towards long-term tenancy and the benefits that <br />accompany it such as housing cooperatives, rent -controlled apartments, and subsidized affordable <br />housing living arrangements. Residents of these types of properties are more likely to feel a sense of <br />ownership or an investment in the property since they are either part owners (in the case of co-ops) or <br />are getting a great deal and a pleasant living experience that would not follow them if they relocated (in <br />the case of rent control and subsidized housing complexes). In the case of more traditional apartments, <br />tenants are unlikely to feel a very strong compulsion to participate in the building's upkeep since they <br />will see few direct financial or lifestyle benefits to be gained by doing so. In these situations, whether or <br />not the landlord is an owner -occupant or a neighbor (versus a fully absentee landlord) might potentially <br />have some bearing on what standards they maintain the property up to. A study by George C. Glaster <br />(1983) attempted to empirically measure the effects of owner occupancy on properties. Glaster ran a <br />series of regressions and concluded that owner -occupants both start off with better housing than <br />absentee -landlords and invest more heavily in maintenance efforts to sustain that high quality. His <br />theory is that owners -occupants experience a reduced quality of life if they do not maintain their <br />property correctly while absentee -landlords are more detached from that. Absentee landlords would <br />also be less concerned with keeping up appearances and meeting neighborhood standards than <br />someone who had to see and interact with the neighbors daily. The study found that owner -occupancy <br />had the most profound "superiority" versus absentee landlord -ism in low income groups, potentially <br />because they have lower opportunity costs from working on the buildings themselves (their time being <br />less monetarily valuable) and are more likely to know their neighbors and value their opinions. Oddly, <br />there have not been any major corroborating studies performed but Glaster's analysis lines up well with <br />what common sense would already lead many people to conclude. Residents who feel a sense of <br />investment in a property and are likely to stay there long-term such as owner -occupiers, co-op <br />residents, and beneficiaries of rent control are incentivized to keep the property up to high standards. A <br />typical renter, being more transient, would not have that same incentive and the care of the property <br />would fall almost entirely to the landlord. In the case of absentee landlords, some sort of municipal <br />oversight might be necessary to ensure that the property was still being kept up even though neither <br />the tenants nor the landlords would be likely to be particularly enthusiastic about maintaining it at high <br />standards. <br />